Rmer Scale

Rmer is a disused temperature scale named after the Danish astronomer Ole Christensen Rmer, who proposed it in 1701. In this scale, the zero was initially set using freezing brine. The boiling point of water was defined as 60 degrees. Rmer then saw that the freezing point of water fell at roughly one eighth of that value (7.5 degrees), so he used that value as the other fixed point. Thus the unit of this scale, a degree Rmer, is 40/21sts of a kelvin (or of a degree Celsius). The symbol is sometimes given as R, but since that is also sometimes used for the Rankine scale, the other symbol R is to be preferred. The name should not be confused with Raumur. Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit learned of Rmer's work and visited him in 1708; he improved on the scale, increasing the number of divisions by a factor of eight and eventually establishing what is now known as the Fahrenheit scale, in 1724.

External link

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
harriet boyd hawes
antonn novotn
operation buccaneer
sailor art thomas
punchbowl crater
james e. campbell
north american christian convention
joseph b. foraker
benjamin cleveland
george hoadly
dara briain
huang chenyan
belgium (disambiguation)
yakovlev yak 38
angiodysplasia
polaron
platform shoe
matt barlow
edwards pierrepont
ghost rider
steinefrenz
julia hartley brewer
paul georgia
sierpinski curve
introduction to objectivist epistemology
v&v: verification and validation
opium (album)
biomedical primate research centre
thrill kill
east humboldt range
marshall field
objectivist epistemology
syntactic methods
hitman (comics)
hugh fearnley whittingstall
star number
arc system works
ukrainian orthodox church of canada
mgm grand las vegas
blue monday
new york new york hotel & casino
shayna fox
list of geography topics
single assignment