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==Self-heating effects== When a current flows through a thermistor, it generates heat, which raises the temperature of the thermistor above that of its environment. If the thermistor is being used to measure the temperature of the environment, this electrical heating may introduce a significant error (an [[Observer effect (physics)|observer effect]]) if a correction is not made. Alternatively, this effect itself can be exploited. It can, for example, make a sensitive air-flow device employed in a [[sailplane]] rate-of-climb instrument, the electronic [[variometer]], or serve as a [[timer]] for a [[relay]] as was formerly done in [[telephone exchange]]s. The electrical power input to the thermistor is just : <math>P_E = IV,</math> where ''I'' is current, and ''V'' is the voltage drop across the thermistor. This power is converted to heat, and this heat energy is transferred to the surrounding environment. The rate of transfer is well described by [[Newton's law of cooling]]: : <math>P_T = K(T(R) - T_0),</math> where ''T''(''R'') is the temperature of the thermistor as a function of its resistance ''R'', <math>T_0</math> is the temperature of the surroundings, and ''K'' is the ''dissipation constant'', usually expressed in units of milliwatts per degree Celsius. At equilibrium, the two rates must be equal: : <math>P_E = P_T.</math> The current and voltage across the thermistor depend on the particular circuit configuration. As a simple example, if the voltage across the thermistor is held fixed, then by [[Ohm's law]] we have <math>I = V/R</math>, and the equilibrium equation can be solved for the ambient temperature as a function of the measured resistance of the thermistor: : <math>T_0 = T(R) - \frac{V^2}{KR}.</math> The dissipation constant is a measure of the thermal connection of the thermistor to its surroundings. It is generally given for the thermistor in still air and in well-stirred oil. Typical values for a small glass-bead thermistor are 1.5 mW/Β°C in still air and 6.0 mW/Β°C in stirred oil. If the temperature of the environment is known beforehand, then a thermistor may be used to measure the value of the dissipation constant. For example, the thermistor may be used as a flow-rate sensor, since the dissipation constant increases with the rate of flow of a fluid past the thermistor. The power dissipated in a thermistor is typically maintained at a very low level to ensure insignificant temperature measurement error due to self-heating. However, some thermistor applications depend upon significant "self-heating" to raise the body temperature of the thermistor well above the ambient temperature, so the sensor then detects even subtle changes in the thermal conductivity of the environment. Some of these applications include liquid-level detection, liquid-flow measurement and air-flow measurement.<ref name="Thermistor Terminology"/>
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