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Phyphox – Physical Experiments Using a Smartphone phyphox.org

slow_typist8 hours ago

There is a paper you can cite if you use phyphox professionally.[1]

In Germany phyphox is quite popular in physics education.

However on android the sampling rate of the acceleration sensor is limited to 50/s. At least if you install through the official app store.

[1] https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1361-6552/aac05e

user_78327 hours ago

> However on android the sampling rate of the acceleration sensor is limited to 50/s. At least if you install through the official app store.

My understanding is that it’s the same even on iOS (or at least on my iPhone SE 2020). More specifically, the output only measures till 50hz (but the sensor sampling rate is actually 100hz - Nquist, you need double the measured frequency as sampling frequency, yada yada.)

slow_typist3 hours ago

I get 100/s on an iPhone SE2. 50/s on a Samsung Galaxy A16 which was released in 2024 or 2025, but that is due to an API restriction. You can export from phyphox (.xslx or .cvs). You get timestamps in the first column. Phyphox refers to the raw data rate, not Nyquist freq.

The sensors have analog lowpass filters that can be adjusted in order to avoid aliasing.

In general, with more bandwidth you can do more intrusive things. But if you want to tell wether two people ride in the same car, 50 Hz should be sufficient anyways.

Phyphox has a smartphone sensor database:

https://phyphox.org/sensordb/

user_78327 hours ago

By the way, it’s important to note that measuring vibrating things can permanently damage the OIS VCs in the camera. (See: Apple’s warning against motorcycle mounts.) my iPhone already had a broken OIS so I didn’t mind as much.

Aachen5 hours ago

Huh? I get 500 Hz here on a Samsung from 2019 and make use of it regularly. Sensor frequency is one of the things I check before buying a new phone, surely newer Android versions haven't killed that with new api restrictions?!

Edit: no, it can't have. Then the phone sensor database would show that since it is built from submissions within Phyphox: https://phyphox.org/sensordb/

I'm not sure what problem you're running into (perhaps a very unusual phone that has only a 50 Hz accelerometer) but Android/Phyphox can do way more than 50 Hz

slow_typist3 hours ago

It is a Samsung a16 and it is just an observation I made, not a problem at all. If it was, I would try another installation source or even switch to a degoogled OS first to get more control over the hardware. Only thing I tried to get more samples was fiddling with the App restrictions. But it really doesn’t matter at all.

extraduder_ire3 hours ago

Does the version on f-droid not have that limitation?

slow_typist3 hours ago

That is a possibility, didn’t check

samch8 hours ago

One of my kids has science project due each quarter in school, and this is our go-to app. We’ve measured acceleration in an elevator, sound attenuation of an audio source in a small vacuum chamber, and the Doppler effect. The app makes it easy to capture and export the data points to make graphs. I highly recommend this even just to play around with.

davidhoell7 hours ago

The coolest thing I ever did with that was finding wires in a friends wall - we needed to drill a hole and it was unclear whether the wires went up (problem) or right from the outlet. I didn't have a cable finder on hand but did have the epiphany to put a large load on the outlet (we used a kettle, a hairdryer would also work, just needs a lot of watts) and use the Fourier transform magnet spectrum to find the 50 Hz grid frequency in the wall. Worked beautifully.

Sadly, since most smartphone magnetometers seem to have a sample rate of 100/s, this will not be applicable to Americans and everyone else with a 60 Hz grid frequency, the 50 Hz were already at the Nyquist–Shannon limit.

gus_massa6 hours ago

> this will not be applicable to Americans and everyone else with a 60 Hz grid frequency, the 50 Hz were already at the Nyquist–Shannon limit.

The trick should work fine, but you may confuse the 60Hz signal with a 40Hz signal [1] [2].

This should work for higher frequencies too, but if the frequency is toooo high the problem is that the magnetometers averages a short period of time (or use a window) instead of being an actual an instant measurement.

[1] Calculated using my fingers moving in the air. 60=50+10 -> 50-10=40. I think it's 40Hz, but I would need a pencil and paper to be sure.

[2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aliasing

slow_typist2 hours ago

If your sample rate is 100 Hz you would usually apply analog lowpass filtering at around 40 Hz, well below Nyquist. But with enough load on the line, since no filter has perfect attenuation in the stop band…

sudb2 hours ago

I think there's loads of scope to use phone cameras as dataloggers too, especially for older equipment that doesn't have an easy way to connect/export the data.

(I've been meaning for ages to write a piece of software that's able to extract change over time data from a video of a 7 segment display, like on a balance or a digital thermometer or something)

xnx6 hours ago

Seems like a more advanced version of Arduino Science Journal https://www.arduino.cc/education/science-journal/

OuterVale6 hours ago

I've had great fun using Phyphox to visualise my hand getting closer/farther from my phone based on the presence of my magnet implant. So many cool little things the app can visualise and measure, especially when used it creative ways.

perlgeek7 hours ago

I used it just the other day.

My parents have a sound bowl, and I wanted to know the resonance frequency. Took an audio spectrum, zoomed in on the first peak, read the frequency (iirc it was around 208 Hz).

eru8 hours ago

Aachen4 hours ago

cc.arduino.sciencejournal for anyone else who is wondering what's behind HN's ellipsis

black6an hour ago

If you prefer not to deal with an app store: https://www.apkmirror.com/apk/rwth-aachen-university/phyphox...

tomaskafka8 hours ago

It’s the GOAT - I showed the app to a bunch of secondary school physics teachers and they were thrilled.

_Microftop11 hours ago

The title was slightly editorialized for clarity.

DaSHacka8 hours ago

I've been using Trail Sense [0] for sensor-related information after learning about it from a friend.

The interface is more polished, but the information is less technical than Phyphox (as the app is geared towards being a survival toolkit).

[0] https://github.com/kylecorry31/Trail-Sense

q3k9 hours ago

Good toolkit to have around. Recently used it to verify the true RPM of a system (using the accelerometer spectrum tool) against its control loop implementation.

TeMPOraL8 hours ago

Indeed. I always keep it installed on my devices, as it turns the phone into a poor man's tricorder, and that's handy sometimes.

Most recently I used it to check light levels at home in different rooms, to determine where we need to boost or replace LED strips. Sure, there's million Lux meter apps, but Phyphox is better than all of them and demonstrates why these things shouldn't be dedicated apps in the first place. In the past I also made use of EM and vibration frequency displays to troubleshoot hardware.

A complement to that is https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=org.intoorbit.... which, once upon a time, helped me track down a source of rage-inducing, late-night high-frequency beeping that was driving us insane - down to specific apartment in a block on the other side of the street. I ended up friends with those neighbors, after teaching them how to disable the alarm clock on their Bluetooth radio when they go away for a weekend.

takahitoyoneda6 hours ago

[dead]

Kevin_VAI5 hours ago

[dead]

henryAlbigale10 hours ago

Cool app dude

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