Shahriar said:
I am designing a high current Power Supply. If I put a resistor in series with PS and sense the dropped voltage across it, then I have increased the output resistor of my power supply. ???
You could use a hall affect sensor that monitors the magnetic field around the conductor if you don't want to increase the output resistance. Another way is to put the current sense resistor in before the voltage feed back loop of the regulator so the it'll compensate for the voltage drop lost in the resistor, you could mimimise the drop in the first place with a very low value resistor and use a mV meter and possibly a differential amp to.
Given I'd go for the hall effect sensor but it might be more expensive, anyway here's a diagram to illustrate my differential amp and current sense idea.
the PS is a SMPS. I don't know whether I can calculate the current from some where else or not?
You could do this in theory but you'll have to take the input into account and it could be complex.
How does Ameter in digital Multimeters work. they can sense current down to 5uA or maybe less. do they use a Shunt resitor or do another trick?
Current sense resistors are normally used for small currents under 10 amps and hall aaffects are used for large currents over 10A. Normal multi meters use current sense resistors but you can get clamp meters with hall affects to measure 100A or more.