Article
Article
- Physics
- Classical mechanics
- Vernier
Vernier
Article By:
Wildhack, William A. Formerly, Institute for Basic Standards, National Bureau of Standards.
Last reviewed:August 2020
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1036/1097-8542.730600
A short auxiliary scale placed along the main instrument scale to permit accurate fractional reading of the least main division of the main scale, invented by Pierre Vernier about 1630. The auxiliary, or vernier, scale is graduated in one or both directions from the fiducial (index) mark in numbered divisions which are fractionally shorter (in a direct vernier) or longer (in a retrograde vernier) than those on the main scale. The position of the fiducial mark (the zero mark of the vernier scale) between divisions on the main scale is indicated by the number of the graduation on the vernier scale which lines up exactly with a graduation on the main scale.
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