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  2. Electrostatic fieldmeter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electrostatic_Fieldmeter

    An electrostatic fieldmeter, also called a static meter is a tool used in the static control industry. It is used for non-contact measurement of electrostatic charge on an object. It measures the force between the induced charges in a sensor and the charge present on the surface of an object.

  3. Wilson current mirror - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wilson_current_mirror

    The mirror circuit of Fig. 5 forces the drain current of M1 to equal the input current and the output configuration assures that the output current equals the drain current of M2. Expanding equation (8) in a two-variable Taylor series about i D 1 {\displaystyle \scriptstyle i_{D1}} and truncating after the first linear term, leads to an ...

  4. Static relay - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Static_relay

    In electrical systems, a static relay is a type of relay, an electrically operated switch, that has no moving parts. [1] Static relays are contrasted with electromechanical relays, which use moving parts to create a switching action. Both types of relay control electrical circuits through a switch that is open or closed depending upon an ...

  5. Contact resistance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contact_resistance

    where and are contact and channel resistances, respectively, / is the channel length/width, is gate insulator capacitance (per unit of area), is carrier mobility, and and are gate-source and drain-source voltages. Therefore, the linear extrapolation of total resistance to the zero channel length provides the contact resistance.

  6. Electrostatic discharge materials - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electrostatic_discharge...

    Insulative materials prevent or limit the flow of electrons across their surface or through their volume. Insulative materials have a high electrical resistance and are difficult to ground, thus are not ESD materials. Static charges remain in place on these materials for a very long time.

  7. Multimeter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multimeter

    Resistance measurements on an analog meter, in particular, can be of low precision due to the typical resistance measurement circuit which compresses the scale heavily at the higher resistance values. Inexpensive analog meters may have only a single resistance scale, seriously restricting the range of precise measurements. Typically, an analog ...

  8. Current–voltage characteristic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Current–voltage...

    In this type the resistance varies with the applied voltage or current. Negative resistance vs positive resistance: If the I–V curve has a positive slope (increasing to the right) throughout, it represents a positive resistance. An I–V curve that is nonmonotonic (having peaks and valleys) represents a device which has negative resistance.

  9. Ohmmeter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ohmmeter

    An ohmmeter is an electrical instrument that measures electrical resistance (the opposition offered by a circuit or component to the flow of electric current). Multimeters also function as ohmmeters when in resistance-measuring mode. An ohmmeter applies current to the circuit or component whose resistance is to be measured.