Accession No

0070


Brief Description

De Luc hygrometer, by Accum, F. C., English, 1810 (c)


Origin

England; London


Maker

Accum, F. C.


Class

meteorology


Earliest Date

1810


Latest Date

1810


Inscription Date


Material

metal (brass, silver); organic (whalebone); gut; wood (mahogany)


Dimensions

length 235mm; breadth 57mm; thickness 13mm box length 251mm; breadth 77mm; thickness 28mm


Special Collection

Robert Whipple collection


Provenance

A note in the accession register states that this object was a gift from Dr. R.S. Clay. The date at which this gift was made, and hence the association with the Whipple collection, is uncertain.


Inscription

‘Accum. London’ (signed)
‘JOHN SANDFORD DYASON F.M.S. & F.R.G.S.
12, Baserhil Garderns
N.W.’ (paper label in box)


Description Notes

Skeletal brass box-frame of rods and bars with circular scale (very worn silvering) at the top and a small suspension circle above that. The whalebone hygroscopic element and fire brass transmission wires are not extant; a gut line runs from the index pulley to the counter-balancing helical spring. Calibrated over some 270o of the circular scale from ‘D’[ry] 0-100 by 10 to 1, to ‘M’[oist]. Fitted mahogany box, with printed card pasted inside for ‘JOHN SANDFORD DYASON F.M.S. & FRGS’ with mss address ‘12 Baserhil Gardens NW’.

Condition: fair; incomplete (hygroscopic element and transmission wires missing).


References


Events

Description
A hygrometer is an instrument that measures the amount of moisture in the air; its dampness or humidity. Hygrometers were originally devised as aids to weather forecasting, but are now more often used to monitor air-conditioning, in museums, for instance.

There are several different types of hygrometer. The earliest type uses the fact that some natural materials are sensitive to dampness. Hair, whalebone and catgut, for example, will all stretch or contract in damp or dry air, so can be made the basis for simple indicators of humidity.


Another type is the wet and dry bulb hygrometer. This consists of two identical thermometers, the bulb of one being wrapped in a fabric sleeve; the sleeve dips into a small amount of water, and is permanently wet. The second thermometer will show a slightly lower temperature due to the evaporation of water from the wet sleeve. The rate of evaporation and the amount of cooling depend on humidity. Evaporation is quick on a dry day, but much slower when it is wet. The difference in temperature between the two thermometers gives a measure of the humidity.

A more precise instrument is the dew-point hygrometer. The dew point is the temperature at which moisture in the air starts to condense as liquid. This depends upon the amount of moisture in the air in the first place, and therefore provides a measure of the original humidity. In the dew-point hygrometer, a glass tube with a gilded bulb is cooled until a mist of condensation is first seen on the gilded surface. A small thermometer inside the tube then shows what the dew point is. By comparison with another thermometer outside the tube it is possible to work out the humidity from a table.

01/03/2001
Created by: Chris Lewis on 01/03/2001


FM:43447

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