Millimetre Of Mercury

  Torr 
One way of defining pressure is in terms of the height of a column of fluid that may be supported by that pressure; or the height of a column of fluid that exerts that pressure at its base. Although a manometer may use any fluid in principle, common fluids like water give heights that can't be contained in a normal room. A water column needs to be of the order of 10 metres to give atmospheric pressure. Therefore, a very dense fluid is required - mercury. Normal atmospheric pressure can support around 760mm of mercury; hence 1/760th of an atmosphere, or 1 mm of mercury, has been a convenient measure of pressure for a long time, and is sometimes called a torr.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
obwalden
texas hill country
brazzaville declaration
tomorrow never dies
sarnen
kerns
list of people from tennessee
sachseln
balcones fault
realms of chaos
alpnach
giswil
lungern
johann, count von aldringer
texas panhandle
conseil d'tat
engelberg
university of copenhagen institute for mathematical sciences
matthias gallas
august von mackensen
inner space caverns
niels bohr institute for astronomy, physics and geophysics
bernhard of saxe weimar
departments of honduras
craven
the best of emerson, lake & palmer
wolves
moult
ernst, graf von mansfield
walt disney's enchanted tiki room
baby the rain must fall
natural bridge caverns
pin feathers
gabriel bethlen
emerson, lake and palmer live at the isle of wight festival 1970
anton walbrook
llano uplift
lapine, oregon
nidwalden
kabah
heinrich leberecht fleischer
refrain
feet of clay
atkins