Accession No

1090


Brief Description

mercury barometer, by John Bennet, English, 3rd quarter 18th Century


Origin

England; London


Maker

Bennett, John


Class

meteorology


Earliest Date

1750


Latest Date

1770


Inscription Date


Material

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


Dimensions

frame 940 x 108mm; bulb at top 43mm outside diameter; tube 895 x 12 outside diameter x 8mm inside diameter.


Special Collection

St. John’s College collection


Provenance

On loan from St. John’s College, University of Cambridge from 08/1951.


Inscription

Bennett
London


Description Notes

Mercury barometer, by John Bennet, 3rd quarter 18th C.

Domestic open cistern stick barometer. Solid mahogany frame with semicircular top; the barometric tube appears to be original with a bulb at the top.
Open cistern with circular front and mahogany cover held in place by two brass screws. Ivory scale and vernier moved by brass arm. Scales allow reading to 0.005 for the level of the cistern.
Moulded mahogany tube cover and turned wooden bulb cover at top of tube; tube exposed between a two part brass register plate. The left hand plate has the weather indications at 1/2 inch intervals from 31to 27, marked ‘Very Dry’, ‘Setd. Fair’, ‘FAIR’, ‘Change’, ‘RAIN’, ‘Much Rain’, ‘Stormy’, ‘Fair if [mercury] rise’, ‘Foul if [mercury] fall’. Right-hand plate divided 31 - 26”, graduated to 1/10”. Manual vernier sliding in a groove with a hinged pointer-vernier graduated to 0.005”. Second groove with a fitting but lacking a pointer, reading from 28 - 22” but no vernier readout facilitiy. Wooden covers for top and bottom of tube, held on by replacement (7-7-1997) screws. Picture in Gunther (1937) shows reservoir cover held on by knurled screws.
Printed lable on back of frame ‘St John’s C / Camb.’


References


Events

Description
A barometer measures the pressure of this air upon us and our surroundings. The precise pressure of the air depends upon the weather, so a barometer is useful for weather forecasting. It can also be used as an altimeter (see "how to use" a hypsometer).

Torricelli, a pupil of Galileo, invented the traditional mercury barometer in 1644. Torricelli took a long glass tube closed at one end and completely filled it with mercury. He chose mercury because of its heaviness. Without letting air into the tube, it was then turned upside down and the open end placed in a bowl of mercury. Suprisingly perhaps, the mercury does not run out of the tube into the bowl (unless the tube is more than 760mm long). In fact, the column of mercury in the tube will always settle at the height of about 760mm above the level of the mercury in the bowl, even if the tube is tilted. This height is where the weight (or pressure) of the column of the mercury is equal to the pressure of air above the bowl, and so the height of the column of mercury measures the pressure of the surrounding air.

It was soon found that the height of the column of mercury was not absolutely fixed, but could rise and fall between 700 and 775 mm, even at sea level. The precise height seemed to depend upon the weather. From the late 17th century, therefore, the barometer rapidly became popular in the home for weather forecasting and later as an aid to the preparation of shipping forecasts. From 1840 onwards other forms of barometer were devised that did not require cumbersome columns of mercury. Best known is the aneroid barometer, which depends upon the expansion and contraction of a partially-evacuated metal chamber to register changes in external air pressure. In the late 19th century small pocket barometers of this type, which could also function as altimeters, were fashionable for mountaineers, balloonists and explorers.

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


FM:40334

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