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eudiometer
eudiometer (juːdɪˈɒmɪtə(r)) [f. Gr. εὔδιο-ς clear (weather) (f. εὐ- eu- + διϝ- stem of Ζεύς, Διός the god of the sky and the atmosphere) + µέτρον measure.] An instrument for testing the purity of the air, or rather the quantity of oxygen it contains. Various kinds have been in use, but the commonest...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Eudiometer
As it measured the salubrity of air, he called it a eudiometer An associate of Moscati's, Felice Fontana also designed a eudiometer on the same principles Similarly, a eudiometer uses water to release gas into the eudiometer tube, converting the gas into a visible, measurable amount.
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oxymeter
oxymeter rare—0. (ɒkˈsɪmɪtə(r)) [ad. mod.L. oxymetrum: see oxy- 2 and -meter.] = eudiometer. So oxyˈmetric a., measured in regard to the amount of oxygen.1857 Mayne Expos. Lex., Oxymetrum, a measurer of oxygen: an oximeter; another name for the instrument called a eudiometer. 1876 tr. Schützenberger...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Marsilio Landriani
In it he described a new instrument, the eudiometer, which was later improved by Volta with the addition of spark wires.
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hydruret
hydruret Chem. (ˈhaɪdrʊrɛt) [f. hydrogen + -uret (taken from sulphuret).] A compound of hydrogen with a metal or organic radical; a hydride.1812 Sir H. Davy Chem. Philos. 411 A solid combination of hydrogene and tellurium..was first observed by M. Ritter in 1808. The composition of the solid hydrure...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Pneumatic trough
See also
Eudiometer
Pneumatic chemistry
Joseph Priestley
References
Further reading
Laboratory equipment
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Scientific instrument
In a description of the use of the eudiometer by Jan Ingenhousz to show photosynthesis, a biographer observed, "The history of the use and evolution of The eudiometer has been shown to be one of the elements in this mix that kept a whole community of researchers together, even while they were at odds about
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-meter
-meter in actual use commonly -ˈometer, and in some later formations -ˈimeter, a terminal element in words denoting scientific instruments for automatically measuring something. Many words with this ending, as barometer, hydrometer, hygrometer, thermometer, were formed in the 17th c., and represent ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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William Haseldine Pepys
In 1807 he invented a type of eudiometer, and in 1808 he was elected to the Royal Society, of which he was a Fellow by 1815. Publications
Description of a new Gas Holder Philosophical Magazine 13 1802
A New Eudiometer accompanied with experiments elucidating its application Philosophical
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phosphoric
phosphoric, a. (fɒsˈfɒrɪk) [ad. F. phosphorique: see phosphor and -ic.] 1. Pertaining to or of the nature of a phosphorus (sense 2); phosphorescent. [F. phosphorique 1765.]1784 Morgan in Phil. Trans. LXXV. 209 Phosphoric bodies are very different..a shell may be made to lose all its light by exposur...
Oxford English Dictionary
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مغواز
مراجع
وصلات خارجية
http://www.schoolarabia.net/kemya/general_chemistry/glossary/chem_4/chem.htm
eudiometer من ويكامور
أجهزة قياس
معدات مخبرية زجاجية
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Giovanni Antonio Giobert
He introduced Antoine Lavoisier's theories to Italy, and built a phosphorus-based eudiometer sufficiently sensitive to measure atmospheric carbon dioxide Giobert contributed significantly to eudiometry, the study of gas composition, by further developing Lavoisier's eudiometer.
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Index of physics articles (E)
Robert
Étienne-Louis Malus
Ettingshausen effect
Ettore Majorana
Etymology of electricity
Euclidean quantum gravity
Euclidean vector
Eudemus of Rhodes
Eudiometer
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measure
▪ I. measure, n. (ˈmɛʒ(j)ʊə(r)) Forms: 3–6 mesur(e, 4–6 mesour(e, -ore, (5 meser, Sc. 6 myssour, myssuyr, 7 meassour, missour), 6– measure. [a. F. mesure:—L. mēnsūra, n. of action f. mēns-, ppl. stem of mētīrī to measure. Cf. Pr. me(n)sura, Sp., Pg. mesura, It. misura. Many of the senses below were ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Henry Cavendish
He described a new eudiometer of his invention, with which he achieved the best results to date, using what in other hands had been the inexact method
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