Primary instrument

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A primary instrument is a scientific instrument, which by its physical characteristics is accurate and is not calibrated against anything else. A primary instrument must be able to be exactly duplicated anywhere, anytime with identical results.

[edit] For Example

  • Pressure. A U tube filled with water is a primary instrument as the water column differential is unchangeable as water is a basic physical substance. It is accurate due to its nature.

[edit] Secondary instruments

Secondary instruments must be calibrated against a primary standard. For example:

  • Time. The earth moving in its orbit is primary. Clocks must be calibrated against it.
 This standards- or measurement-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.