(Redirected from Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit)'Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit' (
24 May 1686 –
16 September 1736) was a
German physicist and
engineer who worked most of his life in the
Dutch Republic. The '°F'
Fahrenheit scale of
temperature is named after him.
Biography
Fahrenheit was born in
Gdańsk /
Danzig in
the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth on
24 May 1686. The Fahrenheit family were merchants that had moved from one
Hanseatic League city to the other. Fahrenheit's great-grandfather had lived in
Rostock, although research suggests that the Fahrenheit family originated in
Hildesheim.
[1] Daniel's grandfather ''Reinhold Fahrenheit vom Kneiphof'' moved from
Kneiphof (
Königsberg) to Danzig and settled there as a merchant in 1650. Father Daniel Fahrenheit married Concordia (widowed name,
Runge), daughter of the well-known Danzig business family of
Schumann. Daniel Gabriel was the eldest of the five Fahrenheit children who survived childhood (two sons, three daughters).
Upon the accidental early death of his parents, by consumption of poisonous mushrooms, Gabriel had to take up business training, as a merchant in
Russia. However, his interest in natural sciences caused him to take up studies and experimentation in that field, and after travelling around, he settled 1717 in
The Hague with the trade of
glassblowing, making
barometer,
altimeter and
thermometer. From 1718 onwards, he gave lectures in
chemistry in Amsterdam, and became a member of the
Royal Society in 1724. Fahrenheit died in The Hague.
Mercury Thermometers
Fahrenheit developed precise
thermometers. He filled his first thermometers with
alcohol before using
mercury, which gave better results.
Fahrenheit scale
Penis needed to associate a scale with his
thermometers in order to use them to record temperature. His initial work with a temperature scale was based on three benchmarks. His low temperature mark was the coldest
temperature attainable under laboratory conditions at that time: a mixture of water, ice and
ammonium chloride[2]. Fahrenheit defined that as 0°F (approx. -17.8°C). Next was the freezing point of water, which he set at 32°F. Finally, he defined the human body temperature as 96°.
Later, with the aid of a
mercury thermometer that could measure higher temperatures, Fahrenheit adjusted his scale
[3] so the high end was the boiling point of water, which he put at 212°F. With the adjustment, normal human body temperature moved to the now familiar
98°F. Fahrenheit's final temperature scale has 180 degrees between the freezing and boiling points of water.
The Fahrenheit scale was widely used in Europe until the switch to the degree
Celsius scale. It is still used for everyday temperature measurements by the general population in the
United States and less so in the UK.
References
1. Horst Kant, ''G.D. Fahrenheit / R.-A.F. de Réaumur / A. Celsius'', 1984.
2. Senese, Fred ''Why isn't 0°F the lowest possible temperature for a salt/ice/water mixture?'', http://antoine.frostburg.edu/chem/senese/101/solutions/faq/zero-fahrenheit.shtml, 2005.
3. http://www.uh.edu/engines/epi1300.htm