Not directly. There is no such thing as a force-o-meter.
Devices like strain gauges, acclerometers, scales, etc. can be used to measure a force only if they have a known stress-strain relationship.
AFAIK, the only things we can directly measure are length, time, and (maybe) charge. Every other measuring device- thermometers, strain gauges, voltmeters, etc convert the direct measurement into what we 'measure' (pressure, force, voltage...) by a calibration step, that is comparison with a standard.
sr_philosophy
Oct10-08, 01:17 PM
yes... what do you think a weighing machine reads?
FredGarvin
Oct10-08, 02:04 PM
yes... what do you think a weighing machine reads?
What? Are you asking or telling? We can not directly measure a force as Andy pointed out. A "weighing machine" as you put it, measures the deflection in a spring. That deflection is calibrated to give a force based on the particular spring constant. Most of the standard types of gauges rely on the measurement of deflection at the core to give you a desired quantity. Even that aside, you never really measure a force, you measure a pressure which is then assumed as the force over a specific area.
sr_philosophy
Oct10-08, 02:19 PM
what force do you think causes the pressure-or-whatever u say?
Pressure...?
stewartcs
Oct10-08, 03:50 PM
AFAIK, the only things we can directly measure are length, time, and (maybe) charge.