On Friday 28 November 2008 14:10, lee wrote: > On Fri, Nov 28, 2008 at 06:59:06PM +0000, Tzafrir Cohen wrote: > > A voltmeter has two connectors and shows the potential differences > > between them. > > > > This is unlike an Ampermeter that shows the current flowing through it. > > If you have a multimeter that can measure voltage or current, both > modes are basically the same. The difference is only in where most of > the current flows. > > Is it even possible to measure a mere potential?
You mean, in principle? Of course. Put your two wires of unknown potential difference at opposite ends of an evacuated tube. Arrange the geometry so that the electric field between them is linear in space. You can do this by hooking them up to big plates and putting the plates close enough together, making basically a vacuum capacitor. Then, shoot charged particles into the space between the electrodes. From the way they deflect, and their charge-to-mass ratio, you can deduce the electric field strength, and from that, the potential difference between the electrodes giving rise to the field. Alternate method: Place a piezoelectric crystal of known characteristics in the gap, and measure the change in shape. From this, you can deduce the degree of polarization, and thus the externally-applied field, and from that, again, the voltage difference between the electrodes. -- A. -- Andrew Reid / [EMAIL PROTECTED] -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]