Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,701,494 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

New voltage standard.


New voltage standard

The National Bureau of Standards National Bureau of Standards: see National Institute of Standards and Technology.

National Bureau of Standards - National Institute of Standards and Technology
 (NBS (National Bureau of Standards) See NIST.

NBS - National Bureau of Standards: part of the US Department of Commerce, now NIST.
) is beginning to use a new device for producing standard voltages that should make life easier for electrical laboratories. The modern voltage standard is related to frequency, which can easily be measured, says Richard L. Kautz of NBS in Boulder, Colo. Frequency can be turned into voltage by a Josephson junction, which, when bathed in radio waves of a certain frequency, puts out a certain voltage.

The trouble with the previous devices is that, using one or two Josephson junctions, they put out either half a millivolt mil·li·volt
n. Abbr. mV
A unit of potential difference equal to one thousandth (10-3) of a volt.



millivolt

one-thousandth of a volt; abbreviated mV.
 or a millivot. This makes it difficult to calibrate To adjust or bring into balance. Scanners, CRTs and similar peripherals may require periodic adjustment. Unlike digital devices, the electronic components within these analog devices may change from their original specification. See color calibration and tweak.  the 1.018-volt Weston cells that the other laboratories use as secondary standards. Furthermore, the primary standard had to be kept at NBS, and so from time to time the laboratories had to send their Weston cells to NBS.

The new standards use microlithography to make series arrays of large numbers of Josephson junctions to produce higher voltages -- 2,000 for 1 volt, 19,000 for 10 volts. They can also be kept in other laboratories, lessening the need for travel, and technicians can operate them. They "don't need a PhD physicist to twiddle See tilde.

1. (character) twiddle - The tilde character.
2. (jargon) twiddle - (To make) a small or insignificant change. E.g. twiddling a program often fixes one bug and generates several new ones (see also shotgun debugging).
 the dials," says Kautz.
COPYRIGHT 1988 Science Service, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1988, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Publication:Science News
Date:Apr 9, 1988
Words:203
Previous Article:Quantum nondemolition experiments.
Next Article:Decline of the CFC empire. (chloroflurocarbona in industry)
Topics:



Related Articles
NEW TECHNIQUE FOR A HIGHER VOLTAGE AC JOSEPHSON STANDARD.(Brief Article)
ask THE SCSI EXPERT.(Questions and Answers)(Technology Information)
Photocurrent Measurement of PC and PV Hg CdTe Detectors.(photoconductive, photovoltaic)(Statistical Data Included)
CONSTANT VOLTAGE STEPS IN JOSEPHSON JUNCTION SERIES ARRAYS AT 10 K.(Brief Article)
U.S. economy reaps benefits of Josephson volt standard. (News Briefs).(Brief Article)
Quantized voltage steps in arrays of stacked Josephson junctions demonstrated. (News Briefs).(Brief Article)
NIST results lead to improvement in Zener voltage reference. (News Briefs).(National Institute of Standards and Technology)
Switch mode rectifiers.(Product Spotlight)(Brief Article)
Avoiding the resistance panic button: troubleshooting resistance measurement discrepancies.(ESD)
Red-faced Dr. Rich.(RAMBLINGS)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles