CHAPTER XXXIII.

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709. What is the thermometer?

The thermometer is an instrument in which mercury is employed to indicate degrees of heat. Its name is derived from two Greek words, meaning heat measurer.710. Why does mercury indicate degrees of heat?

Because it expands readily with heat, and contracts with cold; and as it passes freely through small tubes, it is the most convenient medium for indicating changes of temperature.


"When ye see a cloud rise out of the west straightway ye say, There cometh a shower; and so it is. And when ye see the south wind blow, ye say there will be heat; and it cometh to pass."—Luke xiii.


711. Why are there Reaumur's Thermometers and Fahrenheit's Thermometers?

Because their inventors, after whom they are named, adopted a different system of notation, or thermometrical marks; and as their thermometers have been adopted by various countries and authors, it is now difficult to dispense with either of them.

Fig. 22.—THE THERMOMETERS OF REAUMUR AND FAHRENHEIT COMPARED.

We have combined the two (see fig. 22.) The diagram will, we have no doubt, prove exceedingly useful to scientific readers and experimentalists. There is also another system of notation, adopted by the French, called the centigrade, but it is not much referred to in Great Britain. In the centigrade thermometer 0 zero is the freezing point, and 100 the boiling point. Fahrenheit's scale is generally preferred. Reaumur's is mostly used in Germany. Of Fahrenheit's scale 32 is the freezing point, 55 is moderate heat, 76 summer heat in Great Britain, 98 is blood heat, and 212 is the boiling point. Mr. Wedgwood has invented a thermometer for testing high temperatures, each degree of which answers to l30 degrees of Fahrenheit. According to his scale cast iron melts at 2,786 deg.; fine gold at 2,016 deg.; fine silver 1,873 deg.; brass melts at 1,869 deg.; red heat is visible by day at 980 deg.; lead melts 612 deg.; bismuth melts 476 deg.; tin melts 412 deg.; and there is a curious fact with regard to the three metals, lead, bismuth, and tin, that if they are mixed in the proportions of 5, 8, and 3 parts respectively, the mixture (after previous fusion) will melt at a heat below that of boiling water.712. What is the difference between the thermometer and the barometer?

In the thermometer the column of mercury is much smaller than in the barometer, and is sealed from the air; while in the barometer the column of mercury is open at one end to atmospheric influence.713. Why does the mercury in the thermometer, being sealed up, indicate the external temperature?

Because the heat passes through the glass, in which the mercury is enclosed, and expanding or contracting the metal within the bulb, causes the small column above it to rise or fall.


"Blessed is the people that know the joyful sound: they shall walk, O Lord, in the light of thy countenance."—Psalm lxxxix.


714. When does the thermometer vary most in its indication of natural temperature?

It varies more in the winter than in the summer season.715. Why does it vary more in the winter than in the summer?

Because the temperature of our climate differs more from the temperature of the torrid zones in the winter than it does in the summer, and the inequalities of temperature cause frequent changes in the degree of prevailing heat.

The same remarks (714, 715,) apply to the barometer.


                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

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