Fig. 79.—Thermometer.

[We used to hear the expression, “Heat expands, and cold contracts,” but we trust that all our readers have now learnt that there is no such thing as cold. It is only a negative term. We feel things cold because they extract some warmth from our fingers, not because the substances have no heat.]

Thermometers are made of very fine bore glass tubes. One end has a bowl, or bulb, the other is at first open. By heating the bowl the air in the tube is driven away by the open end, which is quickly dipped in a bowl of mercury. The mercury will then occupy a certain space in the tube; and if it be heated till the liquid boils, all the air will be driven out by the mercurial vapour. By once again dipping the tube in the quicksilver the glass will be filled. Then, before it cools, close the open end of the tube, and the thermometer is so far made. Having now caught our thermometer we must proceed to mark it, which is an easy process. By plunging the mercury into pounded melting ice we can get the freezing point, and boiling water will give us the boiling point. The intermediate scale can be then indicated.

If mercury and glass expanded equally there would be no rise in the latter. Extreme delicacy of the thermometer can be arrived at by using a very fine tube, particularly if it be also flat.

The freezing point in Fahrenheit’s scale is 32°; in the Centigrade it is 0°, and the boiling point 100°. This was the scale adopted by Celsius, a Swede, and is much used. Réaumur called the freezing point 0°, and the boiling point 80°. There is another scale, almost obsolete,—that of Delisle, who called boiling point zero, and freezing point 150°.

There is no difficulty in converting degrees on one scale into degrees on the other. Fahrenheit made his zero at the greatest cold he could get; viz., snow and salt. The freezing point of water is 32° above his zero. Therefore 212-32 gives 180° the difference between the freezing and boiling points of water. So 180° Fahr. corresponds to 100° Cent., and to 80° Réaumur, reckoning from freezing point.

The following tables will explain the differences:—

Table I.
1° Fahr.= 0·55° Cent., or 0·44° Réaumur.
1° Cent.= ·80° Réaumur, or 1·80° Fahr.
1° Réaumur= 1·25° Cent., or 2·25° Fahr.