Reader small image

You're reading from  Arduino for Kids

Product typeBook
Published inMar 2017
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781785884818
Edition1st Edition
Tools
Concepts
Right arrow
Authors (2):
Rishi Gaurav Bhatnagar
Rishi Gaurav Bhatnagar
author image
Rishi Gaurav Bhatnagar

Rishi Gaurav Bhatnagar is a creative technologist who likes to work at the intersection of design and technology. He is an Intel software innovator, Arduino maker fellow, a volunteer at Random Hacks Of Kindness, also Campus Diaries 25 under 25- Science & Tech. When he is not tinkering with technology and storytelling, he spends time building new modules for students that help fuel their curiosity and build their innovation muscle.
Read more about Rishi Gaurav Bhatnagar

Vijay Varada
Vijay Varada
author image
Vijay Varada

Vijay Varada is an artist, engineer, and entrepreneur whose motto is, create positive change in the world through art, design and technology for sustainable and exponential development and progress. He is the CEO, and cofounder of Fracktal Works, which is engaged with design and research in the field of additive manufacturing, rapid prototyping, and product design with its line of desktop and industrial 3D printers aimed at using the technology to empower the abilities of students, engineers, designers, and industries. Vijay actively contributes to open source hardware projects, particularly assistive technologies for the blind.
Read more about Vijay Varada

View More author details
Right arrow

I'm thirsty!


One of the biggest challenges we will be tackling in this project is to figure out if our plant needs to be watered or not.

We do this by measuring the moisture, or the water content of the soil that the plant is in. We will need to measure some quantifiable parameter that directly relates to the moisture of the soil.

This is where our sensor becomes important. As we have discussed before, a sensor is something that converts a physical parameter into an electrical signal that can be measured. In this case, the physical parameter is the soil moisture itself that we want to convert into electric signals.

Commercial soil moisture sensors estimate water content based on the dielectric constant of the soil. The dielectric constant can be thought of as the soil's ability to conduct electricity. The dielectric constant of soil increases as the water content of the soil increases.

This is due to the fact that the conductivity of water is much more than that of soil and its components...

lock icon
The rest of the page is locked
Previous PageNext Page
You have been reading a chapter from
Arduino for Kids
Published in: Mar 2017Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781785884818

Authors (2)

author image
Rishi Gaurav Bhatnagar

Rishi Gaurav Bhatnagar is a creative technologist who likes to work at the intersection of design and technology. He is an Intel software innovator, Arduino maker fellow, a volunteer at Random Hacks Of Kindness, also Campus Diaries 25 under 25- Science & Tech. When he is not tinkering with technology and storytelling, he spends time building new modules for students that help fuel their curiosity and build their innovation muscle.
Read more about Rishi Gaurav Bhatnagar

author image
Vijay Varada

Vijay Varada is an artist, engineer, and entrepreneur whose motto is, create positive change in the world through art, design and technology for sustainable and exponential development and progress. He is the CEO, and cofounder of Fracktal Works, which is engaged with design and research in the field of additive manufacturing, rapid prototyping, and product design with its line of desktop and industrial 3D printers aimed at using the technology to empower the abilities of students, engineers, designers, and industries. Vijay actively contributes to open source hardware projects, particularly assistive technologies for the blind.
Read more about Vijay Varada