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Sensor

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
A sensor is a technological device or biological organ that detects, or senses, a signal or physical condition and chemical compounds.

A sensor should not be confused with the following orthographically distinct items:

Table of contents
1 Artificial sensors
2 Biological sensors
3 See also
4 Links

Artificial sensors

Most sensors are electrical or electronic, although other types exist. A sensor is a type of transducer. Sensors are either direct indicating (e.g. a mercury thermometer or electrical meter) or are paired with an indicator (perhaps indirectly through an analog to digital converter, a computer and a display) so that the value sensed becomes human readable. Aside from other applications, sensors are heavily used in medicine, industry and robotics.

Since a signal is a form of energy, sensors can be classified according to the type of energy they detect. For example:

Biological sensors

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

See also

Links



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