This isn't for homework, just for me to understand the mechanism behind a pH meter and other forms of ion-selective electrodes.
So if the external reference electrode potential is constant, and if the internal reference electrode potential isn't affected by the potential difference that develops at the glass membrane (as a result of a difference in hydrogen ion concentration/activity outside the and inside the glass membrane) as ewmon says, then how is the membrane potential that inevitably develops at the glass membrane detected, and consequently alters the potential difference (voltage) between the two electrodes?