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A Lecture On Accurate Inductive Voltage Dividers
Author(s) -
Andrew D. Koffman,
B.C. Waltrip,
G.E. Piper,
Svetlana Avramov-Zamurovic
Publication year - 2020
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.18260/1-2--11360
Subject(s) - engineering , voltage divider , electrical engineering , nist , transformer , computer science , voltage , natural language processing
: The United States Naval Academy is an undergraduate school with a successful engineering program. An underlying philosophy in the Systems Engineering Department is to emphasize hands-on experience while maintaining a solid theoretical background. To realize this principle, both teachers and students face many challenges. In this paper an attempt is made to teach students how to build a very accurate ac voltage divider with an uncertainty better than a part-per-million. This implies building a transformer-based divider. The idea is to bridge the gap between the state-of-the-art achievements in modern research and the undergraduate level of expertise. Several years ago a group of midshipmen built a voltage divider for a critical point experiment that was conducted in collaboration with a National Institute of Standards and Technology and NASA space shuttle program. In order for the students to be able to build a good transformer lots of coaching took place. This lecture is intended to introduce an engineering student into the art of precise voltage-ratio measurements.

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