Wheatstone Bridge - Wikipedia PDF
Wheatstone Bridge - Wikipedia PDF
Wheatstone Bridge - Wikipedia PDF
Operation
In the figure, is the fixed, yet unknown,
resistance to be measured.
Significance
The Wheatstone bridge illustrates the
concept of a difference measurement,
which can be extremely accurate.
Variations on the Wheatstone bridge can
be used to measure capacitance,
inductance, impedance and other
quantities, such as the amount of
combustible gases in a sample, with an
explosimeter. The Kelvin bridge was
specially adapted from the Wheatstone
bridge for measuring very low resistances.
In many cases, the significance of
measuring the unknown resistance is
related to measuring the impact of some
physical phenomenon (such as force,
temperature, pressure, etc.) which thereby
allows the use of Wheatstone bridge in
measuring those elements indirectly.
The concept was extended to alternating
current measurements by James Clerk
Maxwell in 1865 and further improved by
Alan Blumlein around 1926.
Modifications of the
fundamental bridge
Kelvin bridge
See also
Diode bridge, product mixer - diode
bridges
Phantom circuit – a circuit using a
balanced bridge
Post Office Box
Potentiometer (measuring instrument)
Potential divider
Ohmmeter
Resistance thermometer
Strain gauge
References
1. "Circuits in Practice: The Wheatstone
Bridge, What It Does, and Why It Matters",
as discussed in this MIT ES.333 class
video
2. "The Genesis of the Wheatstone Bridge"
by Stig Ekelof discusses Christie's and
Wheatstone's contributions, and why the
bridge carries Wheatstone's name.
Published in "Engineering Science and
Education Journal", volume 10, no 1,
February 2001, pages 37–40.
External links
DC Metering Circuits chapter from
Lessons In Electric Circuits Vol 1 DC
free ebook and Lessons In Electric
Circuits series.
Test Set I-49
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