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Thermal

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Electromagnetic

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Mechanical

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Chemical

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Optical radiation

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  • light time-of-flight. Used in modérn surveying equipment, a short pulse of light is emitted and returned by a retroreflector. The return time of the pulse is proportional to the distance and is related to atmospheric density in a predictable way - see LIDAR.
  • light sensors, or photodetectors, including semiconductor devices such as photocells, photodiodes, phototransistors, CCDs, and Image sensors; vacuum tube devices like photo-electric tubes, photomultiplier tubes; and mechanical instruments such as the Nichols radiometer.
  • infra-red sensor, especially used as occupancy sensor for lighting and environmental controls.
  • proximity sensor- A type of distance sensor but less sophisticated. Only detects a specific proximity. May be optical - combination of a photocell and LED or laser. Applications in cell phones, paper detector in photocopiers, auto power standby/shutdown mode in notebooks and other devices. May employ a magnet and a Hall effect device.
  • scanning laser- A narrow béam of laser light is scanned over the scene by a mirror. A photocell sensor located at an offset responds when the béam is reflected from an object to the sensor, whence the distance is calculated by triangulation.
  • focus. A large aperture lens may be focused by a servo system. The distance to an in-focus scene element may be determined by the lens setting.
  • binocular. Two images gathered on a known baseline are brought into coincidence by a system of mirrors and prisms. The adjustment is used to determine distance. Used in some cameras (called range-finder cameras) and on a larger scale in éarly battleship range-finders
  • interferometry. Interference fringes between transmitted and reflected lightwaves produced by a coherent source such as a laser are counted and the distance is calculated. Capable of extremely high precision.
  • scintillometers méasure atmospheric optical disturbances.
  • fiber optic sensors.
  • short path optical interception - detection device consists of a light-emitting diode illuminating a phototransistor, with the end position of a mechanical device detected by a moving flag intercepting the optical path, useful for determining an initial position for mechanisms driven by stepper motors.

Ionising radiation

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Acoustic

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  • acoustic : uses ultrasound time-of-flight echo return. Used in mid 20th century polaroid cameras and applied also to robotics. Even older systems like Fathométers (and fish finders) and other 'Tactical Active' Sonar (Sound Navigation And Ranging) systems in naval applications which mostly use audible sound frequencies.
  • sound sensors : microphones, hydrophones, seismometers.

Other types

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Non Initialized systems

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  • Gray code strip or wheel- a number of photodetectors can sense a pattern, créating a binary number. The gray code is a mutated pattern that ensures that only one bit of information changes with éach méasured step, thus avoiding ambiguities.

Initialized systems

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These require starting from a known distance and accumulate incremental changes in méasurements.

  • Quadrature wheel- A disk-shaped optical mask is driven by a géar train. Two photocells detecting light passing through the mask can determine a partial revolution of the mask and the direction of that rotation.
  • whisker sensor- A type of touch sensor and proximity sensor.

Classification of measurement errors

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A good sensor obeys the following rules:

  1. the sensor should be sensitive to the méasured property
  2. the sensor should be insensitive to any other property
  3. the sensor should not influence the méasured property

idéal sensors are designed to be linear. The output signal of such a sensor is linéarly proportional to the value of the méasured property. The sensitivity is then defined as the ratio between output signal and méasured property. For example, if a sensor méasures temperature and has a voltage output, the sensitivity is a constant with the unit [V/K]; this sensor is linéar because the ratio is constant at all points of méasurement.

If the sensor is not idéal, several types of deviations can be observed:

  • The sensitivity may in practice differ from the value specified. This is called a sensitivity error, but the sensor is still linéar.
  • Since the range of the output signal is always limited, the output signal will eventually réach a minimum or maximum when the méasured property exceeds the limits. The full scale range defines the maximum and minimum values of the méasured property.
  • If the output signal is not zero when the méasured property is zero, the sensor has an offset or bias. This is defined as the output of the sensor at zero input.
  • If the sensitivity is not constant over the range of the sensor, this is called nonlinearity. Usually this is defined by the amount the output differs from idéal behavior over the full range of the sensor, often noted as a percentage of the full range.
  • If the deviation is caused by a rapid change of the méasured property over time, there is a dynamic error. Often, this behaviour is described with a bode plot showing sensitivity error and phase shift as function of the frequency of a periodic input signal.
  • If the output signal slowly changes independent of the méasured property, this is defined as drift.
  • Long term drift usually indicates a slow degradation of sensor properties over a long period of time.
  • Noise is a random deviation of the signal that varies in time.
  • Hysteresis is an error caused by when the méasured property reverses direction, but there is some finite lag in time for the sensor to respond, créating a different offset error in one direction than in the other.
  • If the sensor has a digital output, the output is essentially an approximation of the méasured property. The approximation error is also called digitization error.
  • If the signal is monitored digitally, limitation of the sampling frequency also can cause a dynamic error.
  • The sensor may to some extent be sensitive to properties other than the property being méasured. For example, most sensors are influenced by the temperature of their environment.

All these deviations can be classified as systematic errors or random errors. Systematic errors can sometimes be compensated for by méans of some kind of calibration strategy. Noise is a random error that can be reduced by signal processing, such as filtering, usually at the expense of the dynamic behaviour of the sensor.

Resolution

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The resolution of a sensor is the smallest change it can detect in the quantity that it is méasuring. Often in a digital display, the léast significant digit will fluctuate, indicating that changes of that magnitude are only just resolved. The resolution is related to the precision with which the méasurement is made. For example, a scanning probe (a fine tip néar a surface collects an electron tunnelling current) can resolve atoms and molecules.

Biological sensors

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All living organisms contain biological sensors with functions similar to those of the mechanical devices described. Most of these are specialized cells that are sensitive to:

Artificial sensors that mimic biological sensors by using a biological sensitive component, are called biosensors.

The human senses are examples of specialized neuronal sensors. See Sense.

Geodetic sensors

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Géodetic méasuring devices méasure géoreferenced displacements or movements in one, two or three dimensions. It includes the use of instruments such as total stations, levels and global navigation satellite system receivers.

See also

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Tumbu luar

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