“…For example, the Pockels effect has been used to measure the electric field in space [19, 201, to measure high voltage [21], and to observe surface discharge patterns [22,23,24]; the Kerr effect has been used to measure the electric field inside liquid dielectrics as described in this paper; and the photoelastic effect has been used to measure residual mechanical stress distribution in the plastic plate of a compact disk. By introducing recently advanced electronic techniques, new fields of application of dielectric anisotropy are expected to be added to engineering measurement.…”