- Rømer scale
Rømer is a disused
temperature scale named after the Danishastronomer Ole Christensen Rømer, who proposed it in1701 .In this scale, the zero was initially set using freezing
brine . The boiling point ofwater was defined as 60 degrees. Rømer 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 Rømer degree, is 40/21 of akelvin (or of aCelsius degree). The symbol is sometimes given as °R, but since that is also sometimes used for theRankine scale , the other symbol °Rø is to be preferred. The name should not be confused with Réaumur.A plausible story of how the Fahrenheit scale was invented is that
Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit learned of Rømer's work and visited him in1708 ; he improved on the scale, increasing the number of divisions by a factor of four and eventually establishing what is now known as theFahrenheit scale, in1724 .See also
*
Comparison of temperature scales External links
* [http://home.comcast.net/~igpl/Temperature.html A Brief History of Temperature Measurement]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.