Instrumentation And: Measurement In Electrical Engineering

Modern electrical engineering increasingly relies on digital and virtual instrumentation, offering higher accuracy, automation, and data processing capabilities. Nevertheless, fundamental principles โ€“ from Ohmโ€™s law to error analysis โ€“ remain unchanged. An engineer who masters both the art and science of measurement can confidently design, diagnose, and certify electrical systems, ensuring safety, efficiency, and compliance with standards. [1] A. D. Helfrick and W. D. Cooper, Modern Electronic Instrumentation and Measurement Techniques . Prentice Hall, 2015.

The core challenge in electrical instrumentation is that no measurement is exact. Every reading contains some deviation from the true value due to limitations of the instrument, the observer, and the environment. Therefore, a competent electrical engineer must not only know how to connect instruments but also understand the limitations, uncertainties, and proper interpretation of results. Instrumentation And Measurement In Electrical Engineering

[4] R. S. Khandpur, Handbook of Biomedical Instrumentation , 3rd ed. McGraw-Hill Education, 2014 (Chapters on transducers and signal conditioning). [4] R. S. Khandpur