登陆注册
26112700000053

第53章 The Atmosphere and the Barometer

For the discovery of how to find the atmospheric pressure we are indebted to an Italian named Torricelli, a pupil of Galileo, who carried out numerous experiments on the atmosphere toward the close of the sixteenth century.

Torricelli argued that, as air is a fluid, if it had weight it could be made to balance another fluid of known weight.In his experiments he found that if a glass tube about 3 feet in length, open at one end only, and filled with mercury, were placed vertically with the open end submerged in a cup of mercury, some of the mercury in the tube descended into the cup, leaving a column of mercury about 30 inches in height in the tube.From this it was deduced that the pressure of air on the surface of the mercury in the cup forced it up the tube to the height Of 30 inches, and this was so because the weight of a column of air from the cup to the top of the atmosphere was only equal to that of a column of mercury of the same base and 30 inches high.

Torricelli's experiment can be easily repeated.Take a glass tube about 3 feet long, closed at one end and open at the other; fill it as full as possible with mercury.Then close the open end with the thumb, and invert the tube in a basin of mercury so that the open end dips beneath the surface.The mercury in the tube will be found to fall a short distance, and if the height of the column from the surface of the mercury in the basin be measured you will find it will be about 30 inches.As the tube is closed at the top there is no downward pressure of air at that point, and the space above the mercury in the tube is quite empty: it forms a VACUUM.This vacuum is generally known as the TORRICELLIAN VACUUM, after the name of its discoverer.

Suppose, now, a hole be bored through the top of the tube above the column of mercury, the mercury will immediately fall in the tube until it stands at the same level as the mercury in the basin, because the upward pressure of air through the liquid in the basin would be counterbalanced by the downward pressure of the air at the top, and the mercury would fall by its own weight.

A few years later Professor Boyle proposed to use the instrument to measure the height of mountains.He argued that, since the pressure of the atmosphere balanced a column of mercury 30 inches high, it followed that if one could find the weight of the mercury column one would also find the weight of a column of air standing on a base of the same size, and stretching away indefinitely into space.It was found that a column of mercury in a tube having a sectional area of 1 square inch, and a height of 30 inches, weighed 15 pounds; therefore the weight of the atmosphere, or air pressure, at sea-level is about 15 pounds to the square inch.The ordinary mercury barometer is essentially a Torricellian tube graduated so that the varying heights of the mercury column can be used as a measure of the varying atmospheric pressure due to change of weather or due to alteration of altitude.If we take a mercury barometer up a hill we will observe that the mercury falls.The weight of atmosphere being less as we ascend, the column of mercury supported becomes smaller.

Although the atmosphere has been proved to be over 200 miles high, it has by no means the same density throughout.Like all gases, air is subject to the law that the density increases directly as the pressure, and thus the densest and heaviest layers are those nearest the sea-level, because the air near the earth's surface has to support the pressure of all the air above it.As airmen rise into the highest portions of the atmosphere the height of the column of air above them decreases, and it follows that, having a shorter column of air to support, those portions are less dense than those lower down.So rare does the atmosphere become, when great altitudes are reached, that at a height of seven miles breathing is well-nigh impossible, and at far lower altitudes than this airmen have to be supported by inhalations of oxygen.

One of the greatest altitudes was reached by two famous balloonists, Messrs.Coxwell and Glaisher.They were over seven miles in the air when the latter fell unconscious, and the plucky aeronauts were only saved by Mr.Coxwell pulling the valve line with his teeth, as all his limbs were disabled.

同类推荐
  • 外治寿世方

    外治寿世方

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 巫峡

    巫峡

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 十二门论品

    十二门论品

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 辛弃疾词全集

    辛弃疾词全集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 正统临戎录

    正统临戎录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 青蓝彼岸

    青蓝彼岸

    [花雨授权]一成不变其实并不美丽,做自己想做的事,爱自己想爱的人,说自己想说的话,才是真正的海阔天空,才是真正的永恒美丽。
  • 海棠谱

    海棠谱

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 废土之心

    废土之心

    战争,战争从未改变。自有人类以来,自我们的祖先发现石头和骨头具有杀伤力起,血就以各种神的名义染红大地,从正义,到单纯的残暴。2077年,经过了数千年的武力冲突,人类毁灭性的天性终于无法遏制,世界陷入了核能与辐射的深渊之中。但这却不是预言中的世界末日,恰恰相反,这次世界毁灭其实只是人类血腥历史另一篇章的序言而已。对于人类而言,他们成功地毁灭了这个世界。在此之前,数以千计的人通过躲藏在被称之为避难所的地下庞大掩体里逃过了这次浩劫。在浩劫当天,当火焰从天而降时,101号避难所的巨大铁门关闭后就再也没有被打开。这便是你的出生之地,你也将在这里死去。因为在101号避难所,从未有人进来,也从未有人离开。
  • 独霸天下:冷艳杀手王妃

    独霸天下:冷艳杀手王妃

    她剑指天下,只愿做他背后的一个女人!默默无名,纵然世人诽我,谤我,只要他明白此生无憾!【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • EXO之妹妹别怕,我在

    EXO之妹妹别怕,我在

    “盈儿,不要怕”“哥哥……”我们一直都在
  • 录神者

    录神者

    星际时代的来临,却带来了一个人类从未想到的来客。突破了时空限制的传说中的神灵们降临这个时代,意欲统领人类,并大肆镇压屠杀因灵气而进化的新人类——被神灵称为“巫”的物种。人类,开始分裂。顺从者,生活在神灵的重压下;反抗者,游走在光明与黑暗的边缘。而魔族的到来,更将人类推往深渊……
  • 女身的秘密

    女身的秘密

    作为一名即将踏入大学的高中生,林鹰炎因一次意外的嘴馋改变了性别,面对以后的路,迷茫的她将会擦出怎样的火花,走出怎样不同寻常的路呢?作者第一次写文,权当练手,写得烂的话,大家笑笑就算了,而且更新也不一定会准时,毕竟作者不是专业的写手,码字的速度也不快,希望大家多多包含!
  • 你路过我的这辈子

    你路过我的这辈子

    方童在毕业后选择去了支教,在悠悠岁月中认识了一心为学校的郭放,相遇在错误的时间,爱恋总是困难苦涩的。他们在世俗的眼光和道德的底线徘徊,当他们终于鼓起勇气决定一起离开时,现实总是会将美好的幻想打回原型。方童终究一个人离开,再相遇,是错过还是不忘初心.....
  • 际灵

    际灵

    这个世界绝没有想像中那么简单,而人类所生存的这层空间也绝不是唯一。作为维持宇宙平衡稳定的关键事物,却因一次大战意外的消失,出现在了地球上一个最为普通的少年身上,而正是它的到来也让的这个再普通不过的少年踏上了一条特殊的寻亲之途……
  • 帝滎

    帝滎

    公元219年,关羽败走麦城,最后在临沮被杀害,只留下了一块石碑。近十八个世纪后,被一名经历了事业、感情双失败,又经历天灾人祸,穷的快要去卖血的少年在老家不经意间碰到,唤醒了沉睡已久的意志。由此遇到了鬼女、妖女、仙女、女战神,在一次次的相遇、一次次的杀戮与求存中,无尽岁月来的暗影被层层揭开。