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accelerometer
(redirected from Accelerometers)

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accelerometer

Apparatus, either mechanical or electromechanical, for measuring acceleration or deceleration – that is, the rate of increase or decrease in the velocity of a moving object.

The mechanical types have a spring-supported mass with a damper system, with indication of acceleration on a scale on which a light beam is reflected from a mirror on the mass. The electromechanical types use (1) a slide wire, (2) a strain gauge, (3) variable inductance, or (4) a piezoelectric or similar device that produces electrically measurable effects of acceleration.

Accelerometers are used to measure the efficiency of the braking systems on road and rail vehicles; those used in aircraft and spacecraft can determine accelerations in several directions simultaneously. There are also accelerometers for detecting vibrations in machinery.



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? Mentioned in ? References in periodicals archive
 
Accelerometers are electronic sensors that measure the quantity and intensity of movement.
The new technology will replace its LN-20 stellar navigation systems that has used mechanical gyroscopes and accelerometers for over 30 years.
Derrick Zechmair, vice president, Restraints, Safety Electronics, Siemens VDO Automotive, says this method provides faster, more precise results than the accelerometers normally deployed, in part because as crumple-zone engineering has become more sophisticated at slowing impact forces, measuring rapid deceleration has become more difficult.
 
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