| an electronic fire alarm that is activated by the presence of smoke. |

| smoke detector n. An alarm device that automatically detects the presence of smoke. Also called smoke alarm. |
smoke detector
device used to warn occupants of a building of the presence of a fire before it reaches a rapidly spreading stage and inhibits escape or attempts to extinguish it. On sensing smoke the detectors emit a loud, high-pitched alarm tone, usually warbling or intermittent, and usually accompanied by a flashing light. There are two types of smoke detector: photoelectric and ionization. Photoelectric smoke detectors utilize a light-sensitive cell in either of two ways. In one type, a light source, e.g., a small spotlight, causes a photoelectric cell to generate current that keeps an alarm circuit open-until visible particles of smoke interrupt the ray of light, breaking the circuit and setting off the alarm. The other photoelectric detector, widely used in private dwellings, employs a detection chamber shaped so that the light-sensitive element cannot ordinarily "see" the light source (usually a light-emitting diode [LED]). When particles of smoke enter a portion of the chamber that is aligned with both the LED and the photocell, the particles diffuse or scatter the light ray so it can be "seen" by the photocell. As a result a current is generated by the light-sensitive cell and the alarm is triggered.
Learn more about smoke detector with a free trial on Britannica.com.