Characteristics and applications of vibration galvanometers

Autor: Frank Wenner
Rok vydání: 1912
Předmět:
Popis: In the vibration galvanometer we have a type of synchronous motor which is distinctly different from all the ordinary types of dynamo electric machines. Further it does not have any of the characteristics of any of the ordinary galvanometers and except for the fact that it is used in the detection or measurement of small currents and voltages, it should not be called a galvanometer. In galvanometers, except when used in the measurement of transient currents or quantity of electricity, the moving system is displaced until we have an equality of static couples acting on it. In the vibration galvanometer the equilibrium condition is an equality between integral values of the product of the current and generated voltage and the mechanical power dissipated in various ways as in ordinary electric motors when operated without a load. It therefore behaves more like an electric motor than like a galvanometer. Further, since it is used only with alternating currents and operates in synchronism with the current it must necessarily have some of the characteristics of a synchronous motor. As a motor the efficiency of conversion was found in a particular case to be as high as 97½ per cent while the power required to maintain an easily discernable amplitude of vibration was of the order of 10 −11 watts. One of the large turbo-generators would therefore furnish the power necessary to operate a thousand-million-billion such machines.
Databáze: OpenAIRE