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"detector of" is a grammatically correct phrase and is commonly used in written English
It is typically used to describe a person, machine, or device that is responsible for detecting something. Here is an example sentence: "The newly developed sensor is a highly accurate detector of environmental pollutants."
Exact(60)
Albee is an acute detector of other people's tics, but of course he has tics of his own.
While working after hours on his own, he developed an electrolytic detector of Hertzian waves.
It is a low-profile dashboard detector of radar and laser traps.
"Television is a great detector of insincerity – the viewers have got to feel like they can believe in you, silly as it sounds.
The first detector of neutrinos from the sun was built in the nineteen-sixties, deep within a mine in South Dakota.
And there seems to be no escaping the simple fact that subjective experience, in all its forms, is a very unreliable detector of objective reality.
Defa, however, is an emotional director — a detector of the unexpressed, a connoisseur of vulnerability — and he has somehow made the film moving.
This alloy is used as a detector of infrared radiation and is incorporated in particular in night-vision goggles.
You'd need a fancier detector of some sort, such as a millimeter-wave scanner.
C 67.5 is a detector of faces that turned 67.5°.
The most sensitive detector of hog farm air pollution, he adds, is still the human nose.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com