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Arduino Measurements in Science: Advanced Techniques and Data Projects

Product ID : 47262020


Galleon Product ID 47262020
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About Arduino Measurements In Science: Advanced

Product Description Explore the full capabilities of your Arduino. Whether you need to measure light, heat, mass, force, or conductivity, this book can be used as a complete reference guide for making virtually any scientific measurement with your PC or Linux based system and the Arduino microcontroller. You'll apply the Arduino and sensors to take measurements at the macro-, milli-, micro-, nano- and pico-sensitivity ranges. By working through the projects in this book, you’ll learn how to apply these techniques in the lab or field in areas such as weighing samples at the gram or milligram levels, measuring water temperature to a tenth of a degree, or its conductivity in milli or micro Siemens. With these projects, you can reliably measure, store, and experiment with a wide range of scientific data. Arduino Measurements in Science features a novel approach and several little known techniques to measure data that requires only basic and accessible hardware – perfect for the home or school workshop!  What You’ll Learn Make basic scientific measurements with PCs, and Linux based computing systems Review techniques for weighing measurements down into the double and even single digit milligram Use inexpensive sensors and displays to quantify and validate sensor data Incorporate weighing scales, electrometers, magnetic and static field detectors, motion and vibration detectors, and more Understand the possible noise and accuracy problems that can occur and best practices to refine your projects  See the benefits of data validation for graphical data display Who Is This Book For Readers looking to acquire the basic science and engineering skills required to assemble fundamental measurement systems to implement with the simple hand tools found in most home or school workshops. From the Back Cover Explore the full capabilities of your Arduino. Whether you need to measure light, heat, mass, force, or conductivity, this book can be used as a complete reference guide for making virtually any scientific measurement with your PC or Linux based system and the Arduino microcontroller. You'll apply the Arduino and sensors to take measurements at the macro-, milli-, micro-, nano- and pico-sensitivity ranges. By working through the projects in this book, you’ll learn how to apply these techniques in the lab or field in areas such as weighing samples at the gram or milligram levels, measuring water temperature to a tenth of a degree, or its conductivity in milli or micro Siemens. With these projects, you can reliably measure, store, and experiment with a wide range of scientific data. Arduino Measurements in Science features a novel approach and several little known techniques to measure data that requires only basic and accessible hardware – perfect for the home or school workshop!  You will: Make basic scientific measurements with PCs, and Linux based computing systems Review techniques for weighing measurements down into the double and even single digit milligram Use inexpensive sensors and displays to quantify and validate sensor data Incorporate weighing scales, electrometers, magnetic and static field detectors, motion and vibration detectors, and more Understand the possible noise and accuracy problems that can occur and best practices to refine your projects  See the benefits of data validation for graphical data display About the Author Richard J. Smythe attended Brock University in its initial years of operation in southern Ontario and graduated with a four year honours degree in chemistry with minors in mathematics and physics prior to attending the University of Waterloo for a master’s degree in analytical chemistry and computing science and a doctorate in analytical chemistry. After a post-doctoral fellowship at the State University of New York at Buffalo in electro-analytical chemistry Richard went into business in 1974 as Peninsula Chemical Analysis Ltd. Introduced in 1