Arduino in Science: Collecting, Displaying, and Manipulating Sensor Data


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Description

Chapter 1: Button Control of LED Illumination.- Chapter 2: Power Control Monitoring and Creation of Dedicated Graphical User Interfaces.- Chapter 3: Introduction to Scripting.- Chapter 4: Data Entry from the Screen.- Chapter 5: Digital Signal Concepts and Digital Signal Outputs.- Chapter 6: Analog or Digital Conversions for Input and Output.- Chapter 7: Variable Intensity and Power Controls.- Chapter 8: Counting Events and Timing.- Chapter 9: Graphical Data Recording .- Chapter 10: Current Control.- Chapter 11: Microcontrollers and Serial Communications.-



Author: Richard J. Smythe
Publisher: Apress
Published: 10/12/2021
Pages: 473
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 1.58lbs
Size: 9.21h x 6.14w x 1.04d
ISBN13: 9781484267776
ISBN10: 148426777X
BISAC Categories:
- Computers | Hardware | General

About the Author
Richard J. Smythe attended Brock University in its initial years of operation in southern Ontario and graduated with a four year honours degree in chemistry with minors in mathematics and physics prior to attending the University of Waterloo for a master's degree in analytical chemistry and computing science and a doctorate in analytical chemistry. After a post-doctoral fellowship at the State University of New York at Buffalo in electro-analytical chemistry Richard went into business in 1974 as Peninsula Chemical Analysis Ltd. Introduced in 1966 to time-shared computing with paper tapes, punched cards, BASIC prior to Fortran IV at Waterloo, the PDP 11 mini-computers and finally the PC, Richard has maintained a currency in physical computing using several computer languages and scripting codes. Professionally Richard has functioned as a commercial laboratory owner and is currently a consulting analytical chemist, a civil forensic scientist as PCA Ltd., a full partner in Walters Forensic Engineering in Toronto, Ontario and senior scientist for Contrast Engineering in Halifax Nova Scotia. A large portion of Richard's professional career consists of devising methods by which a problem that ultimately involves making one or more fundamental measurements can be solved by using the equipment at hand or using a readily available "off-the shelf/ out of the box" facility to provide the data required.