¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Potentiometers
1. potentiometer [n] - See also: potentiometer
Lexicographical Neighbors of Potentiometers
Literary usage of Potentiometers
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. High-temperature Measurements by Henri Le Chatelier, Octave Boudouard (1912)
"We shall treat of some of them under potentiometers. potentiometers for Use with
Thermocouples. — Although the galvanometric method is suitable for many ..."
2. Experimental Electrical Engineering and Manual for Electrical Testing for by Vladimir Karapetoff (1922)
"DIRECT-CURRENT potentiometers 73. Principle of the Potentiometer. — The term "
potentiometer principle " is generally applied to an electrical diagram of ..."
3. The Measurement of High Temperatures by George Kimball Burgess, Henri Le Chatelier (1912)
"... EMF's have been devised, but they are all modifications, more or less complicated,
of the above. We shall treat of some of them under potentiometers. ..."
4. Pyrometry: The Papers and Discussion of a Symposium on Pyrometry Held by the by National Research Council (U.S.) (1920)
"... potentiometers for Thermoelement Work BY WALTER P. WHITE,* WASHINGTON,
DC (Chicago Meeting, September, 1919) THE measurement of the reading of a ..."
5. Pyrometry: The Papers and Discussion of a Symposium on Pyrometry Held by the by National Research Council (U.S.) (1920)
"... potentiometers for Thermoelement Work BY WALTER P. WHITE,* WASHINGTON,
DC (Chicago Meeting, September, 1919) THE measurement of the reading of a ..."
6. Electric and Magnetic Measurements by Charles Marquis Smith (1917)
"potentiometers 91. General Principles and Simple Circuit. Perhaps no single
instrument is capable of more general application in the electrical laboratory ..."
7. Electric and Magnetic Measurements and Measuring Instruments by Frank W. Roller (1906)
"potentiometers. SLIDE WIRE TYPES. THE potentiometer is an instrument of precision
for electrical measurements that is sufficiently important to warrant ..."