Accession No

3744


Brief Description

marine stick barometer and thermometer, by Troughton & Simms, 2/4 19th C


Origin

London; England


Maker

Troughton & Simms


Class

meteorology


Earliest Date

1825


Latest Date

1850


Inscription Date


Material

wood (mahogany); metal (brass, mercury); ivory; glass; paper


Dimensions

height 870mm; maximum diameter 60mm


Special Collection


Provenance

Purchased from Hoffman Fine Clocks and Barometers, 251 Evering Road, London, 30/05/1990. Purchased with the assistance of a grant-in-aid from the PRISM Fund.


Inscription

‘Troughton & Simms
London’ (barometer)


Description Notes

Marine mahogany square-frame slim-door stick barometer by Troughton & Simms, London. (Post 1826). Constricted tube. Hanging ring, portable screw under brass cover. Ivory scale to barometer, divided 27 to 31 inches, numbered by 1, subdivided to 0.1, vernier reading to 0.01. Thermometer inside door, mercury round-bulb divided on ivory plate, 15˚ to 105˚ F. Paper label on door with illegible ink mass.

Condition good. Mercury drained in March 2009.


References


Events

Description
A thermometer is an instrument that measures how hot or cold something is, in other words, its temperature. Most familiar is the "Mercury-in-glass" thermometer, but there are many other kinds.

Many materials expand as they get hotter and contract as they get colder . This expansion and contraction can be used to measure the corresponding changes in temperature. Thus the first useful thermometers were made from a glass bulb full of mercury to which was attached a narrow glass tube. As the bulb is heated a fine thread of mercury expands up the narrow tube. Thermometers, requiring great skill in glass working, were first made by Daniel Fahrenheit of Amsterdam in 1717.

To measure temperature precisely, a numerical scale of "degrees" is needed. To provide this scale two fixed points are chosen, such as melting ice and boiling water. Convenient temperatures are then given to these two fixed points: today melting ice is given a temperature of 0 degrees and boiling water 100 degrees. This is the Celsius or Centigrade scale (although it is quite arbitrary). Fahrenheit himself originally chose the coldest temperature that he could produce (a freezing mixture of ammonium chloride and snow) as 0 degrees and body temperature as 96 degrees. This resulted in the Fahrenheit scale in which the freezing point of water is 32° F and the boiling point of water is 212° F.

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


FM:44479

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