17.
“Legible”
Scale Thermometer.
Scale about 1/5.

Graduation of Thermometers.—When the fluid (either mercury or spirit) has been enclosed in the hermetically sealed tube, it becomes necessary, in order that its indications may be comparable with those of other instruments, that a scale having at least two fixed points should be attached to it. As it has been found that the temperature of melting ice or freezing water is always constant, the height at which the fluid rests in a mixture of ice and water has been chosen as one point from which to graduate the scale. It has been also found that with the barometer at 29·905 the boiling-point of water is also constant, and when a thermometer is immersed in pure distilled water heated to ebullition, the point at which the mercury remains immovable is, like the freezing-point, carefully marked, the tube is then calibrated and divided as shown in Fig. 16.

The zero of the scales of Réaumur and Centigrade is the freezing-point of water, marked, in each case, 0°, while the intervening space, up to the boiling-point of water, is divided, in the former case, into 80 parts, and in the latter to 100°.

In the Fahrenheit scale, the freezing-point is represented at 32°, and the boiling-point at 212°, the intervening space being divided into 180°, which admits of extension above and below the points named, a good thermometer being available for temperature up to 620° Fahr.

The use of the Réaumur scale is confined almost exclusively to Russia and the north of Germany, while the Centigrade scale is used throughout the rest of Europe. The Fahrenheit scale is confined to England and her colonies, and to the United States of America.

18.
Gridiron-bulb
Thermometer.
Scale
about 1/5.

Circumstances sometimes arise in which it becomes necessary to convert readings from one scale into those of the others, according to the following rules:—

1. To convert Centigrade degrees into degrees of Fahrenheit, multiply by 9, divide the product by 5, and add 32.

2. To convert Fahrenheit degrees into degrees of Centigrade, subtract 32, multiply by 5, and divide by 9.