Hmmm I don't really agree with that statement do you think pointing a radar gun at a car causes it to slow down (even an unperceptable amount) ? Can't temperature be measused by raidiant energy (externally without affecting how the body is raidiating such energy). The wire in question would have to generate magnetic, thermal, photonic or other externally detectable elements in normal operation that can be observed without increasing or decreasing those elements. (Elements isn't the perfect word in there but I couldn't think of anything better while throwing this together).Originally posted by: kaizersose
technically, you cant. the heisenberg uncertainty principle (i could be wrong on the name) says that you cannot measure a system without affecting it. example: by measuring the temperature of water, any measuring device you insert you will introduce a temperature change.
in reality, if you want to measure current, you would use an ammeter which theoretically has infinite resistance (since its wired in parallel to the line you want to measure, no current shoud flow through it). however, a small amount of the current will be lost to the meter but unless you need superacurate results, its not that big of a deal. if you really need accuracy, you are going to have to spend spend spend. hope that helps!
Originally posted by: kaizersose
technically, you cant. the heisenberg uncertainty principle (i could be wrong on the name) says that you cannot measure a system without affecting it. example: by measuring the temperature of water, any measuring device you insert you will introduce a temperature change.
in reality, if you want to measure current, you would use an ammeter which theoretically has infinite resistance (since its wired in parallel to the line you want to measure, no current shoud flow through it). however, a small amount of the current will be lost to the meter but unless you need superacurate results, its not that big of a deal. if you really need accuracy, you are going to have to spend spend spend.
if you just want to know whether current is simply present and not actually measure it, bring a compass close to the wire and see if the needle aligns itself suddenly (perpendicular to the current flow). if the current is too small, this may not work though. hope that helps!
Originally posted by: kaizersose
technically, you cant. the heisenberg uncertainty principle (i could be wrong on the name) says that you cannot measure a system without affecting it. example: by measuring the temperature of water, any measuring device you insert you will introduce a temperature change.
in reality, if you want to measure current, you would use an ammeter which theoretically has infinite resistance (since its wired in parallel to the line you want to measure, no current shoud flow through it). however, a small amount of the current will be lost to the meter but unless you need superacurate results, its not that big of a deal. if you really need accuracy, you are going to have to spend spend spend.
if you just want to know whether current is simply present and not actually measure it, bring a compass close to the wire and see if the needle aligns itself suddenly (perpendicular to the current flow). if the current is too small, this may not work though. hope that helps!