Engineering:Hydrostatic bubbles
Hydrostatic bubbles, also known as philosophical bubbles, gravity beads, aerometrical beads and hydrometer beads, are a type of hydrometer invented in 1757 by Alexander Wilson of Glasgow.[1] The design was subsequently improved and patented by the glassblower and instrument maker Isabella Lovi[2] of Edinburgh in 1805.[3] The instrument, which consists of a set of glass beads, seems to have been particular to Scotland and was only used (for example, in determining the density of spirits) until the early 19th century, when it was largely superseded by more accurate methods.[4]
Operating principle
In Lovi's version of the instrument, a set of hollow glass beads was created, each differing in density from the next by 0.002 units. When added to a liquid of unknown density, the beads that were more dense than the liquid sank, and those that were less dense than the liquid floated. The density of the liquid was indicated as falling between the density of the least dense bead that sank, and the most dense bead that floated.[5]
The operating principle is similar to that of the Galilean thermometer.
References
- ↑ "Philosophical bubbles, alcohol content and the awesome significance of glass". 3 March 2014. https://www.maas.museum/inside-the-collection/2014/03/03/philosophical-bubbles-alcohol-content-and-the-awesome-significance-of-glass/.
- ↑ see A.D. Morrison-Low, "Women in the Nineteenth-Century Scientific Instrument Trade", in Marina Benjamin (ed.), Science & Sensibility: Gender and Scientific Enquiry 1780-1945, Oxford, 1991, p 103.
- ↑ I. Lovi and J.R. Irving, British Patent 2826, 9 March 1805, 'Apparatus for determining the specific gravity of fluid bodies'.
- ↑ "LAPADA". https://lapada.org/art-and-antiques/hydrostatic-bubbles-by-lovi-of-edinburgh/.
- ↑ Irving, H. “The Applications of Floating Equilibrium to the Determination of Density.” Science Progress (1933- ), vol. 31, no. 124, 1937, pp. 654–65. JSTOR, http://www.jstor.org/stable/43411915. Accessed 30 Aug. 2022.
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydrostatic bubbles.
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