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| Invention of Thermometer |
Who Invented? : Dante Gabriel Fahrenheit
When Invented?
: Year 1714
In which country?
: Poland
Today every
store and shops welcomes us with a thermometer because of this COVID-19
situation. Nowadays it becomes precautions for every person to check up their
body temperature here’s the origin story of the tool that’s had us on edge
since the crisis began.
Since the
400BC, temperature of human body considered as diagnostic sign since the
earliest days of clinical medicine. At that time human hand used for detecting
higher temperature of human body called fever, but instruments to measure this
temperature were not developed until the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.
1593 Thermoscope
The
earliest thermal instrument was developed in sixteenth century. In 1593,
Italian inventor, Galileo Galilei first ever tried to make an instrument to
measure the heat or temperature. He was the first inventor of rudimentary
thermoscope. It contains a glass tube filled with water and glass bulbs of
varying masses, each with a temperature marking. The glass bulbs sink as the
temperature of the water rise because increase in the water temperature lead to
change in lightness of water. Here the lowest bulb indicates what temperature
it was. The invention of Galileo Galilei
was called Gelileo thermometer. However
the invention was not strictly called the thermometer but it is called
thermoscope.
What is Thermoscope ?
Thermoscope
is predecessor to thermometer. In an easy term, it is called thermometer
without scale. Thermoscope is an instrument used for detecting difference in
the temperature only. It only gives information about whether the temperature
is higher or lower or similar.
1612 Thermometer
Santorio
Santorio, an Italian inventor, became the first person to put scale on the
Thermoscope. So the inventor of thermometer is thought to be Santorio Santorio
but thermometer was very rudimentary. It was perhaps the first crude clinical
thermometer, as it was designed to be placed in a patient's mouth for
temperature taking.
1654 Liquid-in-glass Thermometer
In 1653,
the first enclosed liquid In glass thermometer was invented by Grand Duke of
Tuscany, Ferdinand II. He used alcohol as liquid in the thermometer. But it was
still inaccurate and didn’t have a measurement scale. But the man credited with
using the freezing point of water as the "zero" or starting point was
a Londoner, Robert Hooke, in 1664. An astronomer called Roemer in Copenhagen
chose ice and the boiling point of water as his two reference points, and
started keeping weather records, but there were still uncertainties about how
to devise an accurate scale that would be reliable everywhere.
1714 Mercury-in-glass Thermometer
Generally a
Mercury-in-glass thermometer is called mercury thermometer. In 1714, a German
instrument maker, Dante Gabriel Fahrenheit invented mercury-in-glass
thermometer for the first time. He used mercury as the expanding fluid because
mercury is a liquid metal that expand uniformly over normal temperature ranges
and contract at lower temperature without sticking at side of glass tube.
In mercury
thermometer, it consists of a bulb containing mercury attached to a glass tube
of narrow diameter; the volume of mercury in the tube is much less than the
volume in the bulb. The volume of mercury changes slightly with temperature;
the small change in volume drives the narrow mercury column a relatively long
way up the tube. The space above the mercury may be filled with nitrogen gas or
it may be at less than atmospheric pressure, a partial vacuum. Mercury in a
small glass bulb expands into an evacuated, linear, uniform cross-section glass
tube. Here the amount of expansion is used to measure the temperature of bulb.
In 1724, he
introduced the standard temperature scale that bears his name—Fahrenheit
scale—that was used to record changes in temperature in an accurate fashion. He
introduced three fixed point and 8 graduations. Zero degree was the lowest
temperature that he could obtain in laboratory, the temperature of mixture of
water, water ice and ammonium chloride. 32 was the temperature of an ice and water mixture, 96 was the
temperature of human body.
1867 The first medical Thermometer
The first real medical thermometer was invented by Sir
Thomas Allbut in 1867. It was six inches long and took about five minutes to
take a person’s temperature.
For almost a hundred years thermometers were basically
unchanged. They contained alcohol or mercury and were considered to be very
accurate. More modern thermometers were developed after World War II that used
infrared technology and placed in the ear. They utilized tiny electrical
circuits and numerical readouts that
could measure temperature more quickly and with more precision than the liquid
filled glass tubes. Today modern thermometers use some type of electrical sensors
to measure temperature but the same numerical scales developed in the 1700’s by
Fahrenheit and Celsius are still being used.
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3 Comments
Good content with quality information
ReplyDeleteThnak you so much
Thnak you so much
ReplyDeleteVery good content about mercury thermometer. Writing skill is awesome and please upload more post on inventionsu.
ReplyDelete