Armpit
joyful
hexadecimal
50°, 130°, and 50° are.
ok
A Thermometer is a Laboratory Equipment that measures temperature.
A thermometer is most commonly used to measure the temperature of a liquid. Other methods, such as infrared thermometers or thermocouples, can also be used depending on the specific application and characteristics of the liquid.
A thermometer is a device used to measure temperature at a specific point in time, typically by using a liquid or digital display. A thermograph, on the other hand, is a device that continuously records and graphs temperature over a period of time, providing a visual representation of temperature fluctuations.
A thermostat is a device that is used to regulate and control the temperature in a system, such as a heating or cooling system, to maintain a desired temperature. A thermometer, on the other hand, is a device used to measure and display the temperature of a particular environment or object. In essence, a thermostat is used to control temperature, while a thermometer is used to measure temperature.
There is no special name for a maximum-minimum thermometer. It generally consists of two scales one will push a slider up as the temperature increases and the other thermometer pushes a slider down as the temperature goes down. You read it by observing the position of the sliders and then reset it so that the sliders return to the current temperature.
A thermometer does nothing in a furnace control system other than indicate temperature at a thermostat. A physical thermostat on the other hand controls variances of temperature (called anticipation) using the principles of a thermometer which is expansion of a liquid in a sealed capillary/bulb. A thermistor is another device used in electronic temperature measurement at nominal to extreme temperatures. It measures the resistance of power to indicate temperature.
Heat is measured by a calorimeter. The calorimeter has been used to measure heat since 1782. Temperature on the other hand is measured by a thermometer.
A deformation thermometer measures temperature by using materials that change shape with temperature variations. As the temperature increases, the material expands or contracts, causing a mechanical deformation. This change in shape is then converted into a temperature reading based on the known relationship between the material's deformation and temperature.
A thermometer measures temperature using a temperature-dependent physical property, such as liquid expansion or electrical resistance. A thermocouple, on the other hand, generates a voltage proportional to the temperature difference between its two junctions, based on the Seebeck effect. Thermocouples are typically used in more extreme temperature environments compared to thermometers.
Body temperature can also be measured with a thermometer at the armpit i believe.
A thermometer and a barometer are alike, because a thermometer tells temperature, and a barometer tells air pressure. They sort off connect, because when you have lower air pressure, you get colder temperatures and when you have higher air pressure, you know then that the temperature will be hotter. You can kinda tell by looking at only one piece of data, what the other piece might be. I'm pretty sure that's right, I'm only in 7th grade.
The seismometer is the 'odd one out'. The other instruments measure factors to do with weather (wind speed, air pressure & temperature) - the seismometer measures movements in the Earth's crust.