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单词 pyrometer
释义

pyrometer

enUK

py·rom·e·ter

P0689200 (pī-rŏm′ĭ-tər)n. Any of various thermometers used for measuring high temperatures.
py′ro·met′ric (-rə-mĕt′rĭk), py′ro·met′ri·cal (-rĭ-kəl) adj.py′ro·met′ri·cal·ly adv.py·rom′e·try n.

pyrometer

(paɪˈrɒmɪtə) n (General Physics) an instrument for measuring high temperatures, esp by measuring the brightness (optical pyrometer) or total quantity (radiation pyrometer) of the radiation produced by the source. Other types include the resistance thermometer and the thermocouple pyrometric, ˌpyroˈmetrical adj ˌpyroˈmetrically adv pyˈrometry n

py•rom•e•ter

(paɪˈrɒm ɪ tər)

n. an apparatus for measuring high temperatures that uses the radiation emitted by a hot body as a basis for measurement. [1740–50] py`ro•met′ric (-rəˈmɛ trɪk) adj.

pyrometer

an instrument for detecting and measuring high temperatures. — pyrometric, pyrometry, adj.See also: Instruments
Thesaurus
Noun1.pyrometer - a thermometer designed to measure high temperaturesoptical pyrometer, pyroscope - a pyrometer that uses the color of the light emitted by a hot objectpyrometric cone - a pyrometer consisting of a series of cones that melt at different temperaturesradiation pyrometer - a pyrometer for estimating the temperature of distant sources of heat; radiation is focussed on a thermojunction connected in circuit with a galvanometerresistance pyrometer - pyrometer that measures high temperatures by the resistance in a heated wirethermometer - measuring instrument for measuring temperature
Translations
pirómetropirometro

pyrometer

enUK

Pyrometer

A temperature-measuring device, originally an instrument that measures temperatures beyond the range of thermometers, but now in addition a device that measures thermal radiation in any temperature range. This article discusses radiation pyrometers; for other temperature-measuring devices See Bolometer, Thermistor, Thermocouple

The illustration shows a very simple type of radiation pyrometer. Part of the thermal radiation emitted by a hot object is intercepted by a lens and focused onto a thermopile. The resultant heating of the thermopile causes it to generate an electrical signal (proportional to the thermal radiation) which can be displayed on a recorder.

Elementary radiation pyrometerElementary radiation pyrometer

Unfortunately, the thermal radiation emitted by the object depends not only on its temperature but also on its surface characteristics. The radiation existing inside hot, opaque objects is so-called blackbody radiation, which is a unique function of temperature and wavelength and is the same for all opaque materials. However, such radiation, when it attempts to escape from the object, is partly reflected at the surface. In order to use the output of the pyrometer as a measure of target temperature, the effect of the surface characteristics must be eliminated. A cavity can be formed in an opaque material and the pyrometer sighted on a small opening extending from the cavity to the surface. The opening has no surface reflection, since the surface has been eliminated. Such a source is called a blackbody source, and is said to have an emittance of 1.00. By attaching thermocouples to the blackbody source, a curve of pyrometer output voltage versus blackbody temperature can be constructed. See Blackbody, Heat radiation

Pyrometers can be classified generally into types requiring that the field of view be filled, such as narrow-band and total-radiation pyrometers; and types not requiring that the field of view be filled, such as optical and ratio pyrometers. The latter depend upon making some sort of comparison between two or more signals.

The optical pyrometer should more strictly be called the disappearing-filament pyrometer. In operation, an image of the target is focused in the plane of a wire that can be heated electrically. A rheostat is used to adjust the current through the wire until the wire blends into the image of the target (equal brightness condition), and the temperature is then read from a calibrated dial on the rheostat.

The ratio, or “two-color,” pyrometer makes measurements in two wavelength regions and electronically takes the ratio of these measurements. If the emittance is the same for both wavelengths, the emittance cancels out of the result, and the true temperature of the target is obtained. This so-called graybody assumption is sufficiently valid in some cases so that the “color temperature” measured by a ratio pyrometer is close to the true temperature. See Temperature measurement, Thermometer

pyrometer

[pī′räm·əd·ər] (engineering) Any of a broad class of temperature-measuring devices; they were originally designed to measure high temperatures, but some are now used in any temperature range; includes radiation pyrometers, thermocouples, resistance pyrometers, and thermistors.

Pyrometer

A temperature-measuring device, originally an instrument that measures temperatures beyond the range of thermometers, but now in addition a device that measures thermal radiation in any temperature range. This article discusses radiation pyrometers; for other temperature-measuring devices See Bolometer, Thermistor, Thermocouple

The illustration shows a very simple type of radiation pyrometer. Part of the thermal radiation emitted by a hot object is intercepted by a lens and focused onto a thermopile. The resultant heating of the thermopile causes it to generate an electrical signal (proportional to the thermal radiation) which can be displayed on a recorder.

Unfortunately, the thermal radiation emitted by the object depends not only on its temperature but also on its surface characteristics. The radiation existing inside hot, opaque objects is so-called blackbody radiation, which is a unique function of temperature and wavelength and is the same for all opaque materials. However, such radiation, when it attempts to escape from the object, is partly reflected at the surface. In order to use the output of the pyrometer as a measure of target temperature, the effect of the surface characteristics must be eliminated. A cavity can be formed in an opaque material and the pyrometer sighted on a small opening extending from the cavity to the surface. The opening has no surface reflection, since the surface has been eliminated. Such a source is called a blackbody source, and is said to have an emittance of 1.00. By attaching thermocouples to the black-body source, a curve of pyrometer output voltage versus blackbody temperature can be constructed.

Pyrometers can be classified generally into types requiring that the field of view be filled, such as narrow-band and total-radiation pyrometers; and types not requiring that the field of view be filled, such as optical and ratio pyrometers. The latter depend upon making some sort of comparison between two or more signals.

The optical pyrometer should more strictly be called the disappearing-filament pyrometer. In operation, an image of the target is focused in the plane of a wire that can be heated electrically. A rheostat is used to adjust the current through the wire until the wire blends into the image of the target (equal brightness condition), and the temperature is then read from a calibrated dial on the rheostat.

The ratio, or “two-color,” pyrometer makes measurements in two wavelength regions and electronically takes the ratio of these measurements. If the emittance is the same for both wavelengths, the emittance cancels out of the result, and the true temperature of the target is obtained. This so-called gray-body assumption is sufficiently valid in some cases so that the “color temperature” measured by a ratio pyrometer is close to the true temperature. See Thermometer

pyrometer

An instrument for measuring high temperatures.

pyrometer

A device for measuring the turbine blade temperature by converting radiated energy into electrical energy. It consists of a photovoltaic cell, sensitive to radiation over a band in the infrared region of the spectrum, and a lens system to focus the radiation into the cell. The device is positioned onto the nozzle casing so that the lens system can be focused directly onto the turbine blade. The radiated energy emitted by the blades is converted to electrical energy by the photovoltaic cell and thereafter amplified to indicate the same on an instrument.

pyrometer

enUK

py·rom·e·ter

(pī-rom'ĕ-tĕr), An instrument for measuring high degrees of heat, beyond the capacity of a mercury or gas thermometer. [pyro- + G. metron, measure]

pyrometer

(pī-rŏm′ĕ-tĕr) [″ + metron, measure] A device for measuring a very high temperature.

pyrometer

enUK
Related to pyrometer: radiation pyrometer, optical pyrometer, thermocouple pyrometer
  • noun

Words related to pyrometer

noun a thermometer designed to measure high temperatures

Related Words

  • optical pyrometer
  • pyroscope
  • pyrometric cone
  • radiation pyrometer
  • resistance pyrometer
  • thermometer
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更新时间:2024/9/23 6:23:04