Accession No

2905


Brief Description

air pump, I. Newmann, English, 1825-1850


Origin

122; Regent Street; London; England


Maker

Newman.I


Class

physics


Earliest Date

1825


Latest Date

1850


Inscription Date


Material

wood (mahogany); metal (brass); glass


Dimensions

height 640mm; breadth 310mm; depth 540mm


Special Collection


Provenance

Purchased from Peter Delehar, London, England, 10/1982.


Inscription

‘I. NEWMANN
122 Regent St.
LONDON’


Description Notes

Mahogany base with 4 turned mahogany pillars, each with brass knob to square mahogany stand; 4 brass pillars at front, the two central ones with pumps driven by cogged shafts and crank handle to mahogany handle; tube from pump to glass bell jar on stand and to narrow cylindrical glass on small circular stand at the back of the base. 2 valves on tube.


References


Events

Description
In 1647 Otto von Guerricke of Magdeburg, invented the first vacuum pump. Guerricke was a physicist, engineer and natural philosopher. His intention in creating the vacuum pump was to study vacuums and the role of air in combustion and respiration.

The vacuum pump is in principle a relatively simple instrument. As the handle is turned the pump moves up and down and the air in the bell jar is evacuated and a partial vacuum is created.

A perfect vacuum is a space with no matter in it. However, a perfect vacuum has never been obtained, the most complete man made vacuum had approximately 100,000 gas molecules cc, compared to 30 billion billion in air at sea level. It is estimated that in space there is roughly one molecule per cubic meter.

A famous early demonstration of a vacuum was that carried out by Otto von Guerricke in Magdeburg. A vacuum pump evacuated air from the inside of two hemispheres that had been placed open edge to open edge. Two teams of eight horses were then attached to the hemisphere handles but failed to pull apart the “Magdeburg” hemispheres.


Created by: Boris Jardine


FM:45048

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