Rømerskala
The Rømerscale is an old temperature scale and is considered to be the forerunner of the Fahrenheit and Celsius scales . It was developed in 1701 by the Danish astronomer Ole Christensen Rømer (1644-1710). Temperatures on this scale are given in degrees Rømer (abbr .: ° Rø).
The zero point of the scale is defined by the melting point of brine . As a second reference point on the scale, Rømer used the boiling point of water and set this to 60 ° Rø. He obtained the values between these two points by linear graduation with interpolation . According to this scale, ice has a melting point of 7.5 ° Rø.
Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit heard about the work of Rømer and visited him in 1708 . He adopted the idea of two reference points (boiling point and melting point of certain substances) and set himself the goal of improving this scale. In 1714 he developed the Fahrenheit scale from this . Also Celsius adopted the idea for its Celsius scale .
Temperature scales
unit | Unit symbol | lower anchor point F 1 | upper anchor point F 2 | Unit value | inventor | Year of creation | Distribution area |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Kelvin | K |
Absolute zero point , T 0 = 0 K |
Now without a fixed point, originally later T Tri ( H 2 O ) = 273.16 K |
earlier |
William Thomson Baron Kelvin | 1848 | worldwide ( SI unit ) |
centigrade | ° C | Now 0 ° C = 273.15 K, previously T Schm (H 2 O) = 0 ° C |
Now coupling to Kelvin, previously T boiling (H 2 O) = 100 ° C |
earlier |
Different Celsius | 1742 | worldwide ( derived SI unit ) |
degrees Fahrenheit | ° F | Now 32 ° F = 273.15 K, originally T cold. = 0 ° F, later T Schm (H 2 O) = 32 ° F |
Now coupling to Kelvin, originally T human = 96 ° F, later T boiling (H 2 O) = 212 ° F |
originally later |
Daniel Fahrenheit | 1714 | United States |
Rankine degree | ° Ra, ° R | T 0 = 0 ° Ra | Now coupling to Kelvin | William Rankine | 1859 | United States | |
Degree Delisle | ° De, ° D | T Schm (H 2 O) = 150 ° De | T boiling (H 2 O) = 0 ° De | Joseph-Nicolas Delisle | 1732 | Russia (19th century) | |
Degree Réaumur | ° Ré, ° Re, ° R | T Schm (H 2 O) = 0 ° Ré | T boiling (H 2 O) = 80 ° Ré | René-Antoine Ferchault de Réaumur | 1730 | Western Europe until the end of the 19th century | |
Degrees Newtons | ° N | T Schm (H 2 O) = 0 ° N | T boiling (H 2 O) = 33 ° N | Isaac Newton | ≈ 1700 | none | |
Degree Rømer | ° Rø | T Schm ( Lake ) = 0 ° Rø | T boiling (H 2 O) = 60 ° Rø | Ole Romer | 1701 | none | |
Notes on the table:
|
Temperature conversion
→ from → |
Kelvin (K) |
Degrees Celsius (° C) |
Degrees Fahrenheit (° F) |
Rankine degree (° Ra) |
|
---|---|---|---|---|---|
↓ to ↓ | |||||
T Kelvin | = | T K | T C + 273.15 | (T F + 459.67) 5 ⁄ 9 | T Ra · 5 / 9 |
T Celsius | = | T K - 273.15 | T C | (T F - 32) 5 ⁄ 9 | T Ra · 5 / 9 - 273.15 |
T Fahrenheit | = | T K * 1.8 - 459.67 | T C * 1.8 + 32 | T F | T Ra - 459.67 |
T Rankine | = | T K * 1.8 | T C * 1.8 + 491.67 | T F + 459.67 | T Ra |
T Réaumur | = | (T K - 273.15) x 0.8 | T C x 0.8 | (T F - 32) 4 ⁄ 9 | T Ra · 4 / 9 - 218.52 |
T Rømer | = | (T K - 273.15) 21 ⁄ 40 + 7.5 | T C · 21 / 40 + 7.5 | (T F - 32) 7 ⁄ 24 + 7.5 | (T Ra - 491.67) 7 ⁄ 24 + 7.5 |
T Delisle | = | (373.15 - T K ) x 1.5 | (100 - T C ) x 1.5 | (212 - T F ) 5 ⁄ 6 | (671.67 - T Ra ) 5 ⁄ 6 |
T Newtons | = | (T K - 273.15) x 0.33 | T C x 0.33 | (T F - 32) 11 ⁄ 60 | (T Ra - 491.67) 11 ⁄ 60 |
→ from → | Degree Réaumur (° Ré) |
Degree Rømer (° Rø) |
Degree Delisle (° De) |
Degree Newton (° N) |
|
↓ to ↓ | |||||
T Kelvin | = | T Ré 1.25 + 273.15 | (T Rø - 7.5) 40 ⁄ 21 + 273.15 | 373.15 - T De · 2 / 3 | T N · 100 / 33 + 273.15 |
T Celsius | = | T Ré 1.25 | (T Rø - 7.5) 40 ⁄ 21 | 100 - T De · 2 / 3 | T N · 100 / 33 |
T Fahrenheit | = | T Ré · 2.25 + 32 | (T Rø - 7.5) 24 ⁄ 7 + 32 | 212 - T De 1.2 | T N · 60 / 11 + 32 |
T Rankine | = | T Ré · 2.25 + 491.67 | (T Rø - 7.5) 24 ⁄ 7 + 491.67 | 671.67 - T De * 1.2 | T N · 60 ⁄ 11 + 491.67 |
T Réaumur | = | T Ré | (T Rø - 7.5) 32 ⁄ 21 | 80 - T De · 8 / 15 | T N · 80 / 33 |
T Rømer | = | T Re · 21 / 32 + 7.5 | T Rø | 60 - T De 0.35 | T N · 35 / 22 + 7.5 |
T Delisle | = | (80 - T Ré ) · 1.875 | (60 - T Rø ) 20 ⁄ 7 | T De | (33 - T N ) 50 ⁄ 11 |
T Newtons | = | T Re · 33 / 80 | (T Rø - 7.5) 22 ⁄ 35 | 33 - T De · 0.22 | T N |