Another term for electric potential or electromotive force is voltage. A volt is actually the unit we use to measure difference of electrical potential, by the way. To measure voltage, we use a voltmeter.
Another Answer
'Voltage' is another word for 'potential difference' (an electromotive force is simply a source's no-load potential difference), but it is NOT synonymous with 'potential'. In simple terms, 'potential' is equivalent to 'height', whereas 'potential difference' is equivalent to 'difference in height'. Potential is relative, because it depends on its point of reference (usually earth or ground in most practical circuits, but it can be any point elsewhere in the same circuit), whereas potential difference is absolute. Potential and potential difference are both measured in volts, and the instrument used to measure them is the voltmeter.
Galvanometer
A clamp meter
it is AMMETER
galvanometer
galvanometer
It is a clamp meter
A current meter. One with a meter movement not a digital one.
Most often, a voltmeter.
an electric field meter.
the volt
Volt
Pyrometer
A voltmeter
In SI, the same unit is used for any type of energy: the joule.
A compass.
Anemometer
A seismograph
A thermometer measures molecular energy.
Electric motor is a machine that converts electrical energy to mechanical energy while a Galvanometer is an electrical instrument that measures small values of current.
An ammeter. It measures the electrical current output.
A voltmeter
Its Dynamo....
The Ammeter XD
That is achieved by an instrument called a microphone.
Quantity of electrical energy.
Hygrometer
Microphone, generator [dynamo], Wind mill
The instrument that converts light into electricity is called a Photovoltiac. I hope this answers your question.
The device used to measure changes in thermal energy is called a calorimeter.