Abstract
THERE are several methods by which galvanometers may be graduated so as to measure currents and potentials in absolute measure, but they all involve, directly or indirectly, a comparison of the indications of the instrument to be graduated with those of a standard instrument, of which the constants are fully known for the place at which the comparison is made. There are various forms of such standard instruments, as, for example, the tangent galvanometer which Joule made, consisting of a single coil of large radius, and a small needle hung at its centre, or the Helmholtz modification of the same instrument with two large equal coils placed side by side at a distance apart equal to the radius of either; or some form of “dynamometer,” or instrument in which the needle of the galvanometer is replaced by a movable coil, in which the whole or a known portion of the current in the fixed coil flows. The measurement Consists essentially in determining the couple which must be exerted by the earth's magnetic force on the needle or suspended coil, in order to equilibrate that exerted by the current. But the former depends on the value, usually denoted by H, of the horizontal component of the earth's magnetic force, and it is necessary therefore, except when some such method as that of Kohlrausch, described below, is used, to know the value of that quantity in absolute units.
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GRAY, A. On the Graduation of Galvanometers for the Measurement of Currents and Potentials in Absolute Measure . Nature 27, 32–35 (1882). https://doi.org/10.1038/027032c0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/027032c0