AN EQUATION FOR THE ‘WEATHER
GLASS’
BY MICHAEL JEWESS
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Full
text available at: https://doi.org/10.1088/1361-6552/ad1eff
This
work was published in Physics Education,
2024, 59(3), 035006.
Abstract
The 'weather glass',
containing air and (usually) water, is a compact barometer, less accurate but
more convenient than the Torricellian barometer of 1644. The weather glass
pre-dates the Torricellian barometer, and coexisted with it until it was
out-competed from about 1860 by the more accurate, comparably compact aneroid
barometer. Today, the weather glass is sold as an elegant interior decoration
and is also constructible in a student laboratory. Elementary physics allows
one to model its response to changing pressure at constant temperature and also
the adjustments that need to be made if the temperature varies. In an air- and
water-containing weather glass, the principal factor affecting movements of the
water level is the expansion and contraction of the atmospheric nitrogen,
oxygen, and argon in a headspace above the water, well represented by the ideal
gas law. The water acts primarily as a piston allowing the expansion and
contraction to be observed. In contrast, Torricellian and aneroid barometers respond
directly to the pressure difference between the atmosphere and a vacuum.
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