Stray capacitance is unwanted capacitance that exists between conductive parts of a circuit or between circuit components and their surroundings (like ground or other components) due to their proximity It can cause signal coupling, loading effects, and alter frequency response, especially at high frequencies
- Shielding: Enclosing sensitive components or wires within a grounded conductive shield intercepts stray electric fields, preventing them from coupling capacitively to the component
- Grounding (Earthing): Properly grounding circuit components and shields provides a common reference potential and directs stray currents or fields to ground, minimizing their impact on the circuit's operation Wagner earth devices in AC bridges are a specific example
Inductors and resistors don't directly minimize stray capacitance itself, though they might be used in filter circuits Galvanometers are detectors Shielding and grounding are the primary techniques to minimize the *effects* of stray capacitance
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