Modern mobile phones come with a variety of sensors that automate or easy many of our daily tasks. This field takes into account the presence of an accelerometer, a gyroscope, a compass, and a barometer.
Accelerometer and gyroscope
Accelerometers in mobile phones are used to detect the
orientation of the phone. The gyroscope, or gyro for short, adds an additional
dimension to the information supplied by the accelerometer by tracking rotation
or twist.
An accelerometer measures linear acceleration of
movement, while a gyro on the other hand measures the angular rotational
velocity. Both sensors measure rate of change; they just measure the rate of
change for different things.
In practice, that means that an accelerometer will
measure the directional movement of a device but will not be able to resolve
its lateral orientation or tilt during that movement accurately unless a gyro
is there to fill in that info.
With an accelerometer you can either get a really
"noisy" info output that is responsive, or you can get a
"clean" output that's sluggish. But when you combine the 3-axis
accelerometer with a 3-axis gyro, you get an output that is both clean and
responsive in the same time."
Digital compass
The digital compass that's usually based on a sensor
called magnetometer provides mobile phones with a simple orientation in
relation to the Earth's magnetic field. As a result, your phone always knows
which way is North so it can auto rotate your digital maps depending on your
physical orientation.
Barometer
And finally, you may see a device sporting a barometer
in its specs sheet. Contrary to what you may suggest, it has nothing to do with
weather. Instead, the barometer is there to help the GPS chip inside the device
get a faster lock by instantly delivering altitude data.
Source : GsmArena
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