atmometer

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(ăt-mŏm'ĭ-tər) pronunciation
n.
An instrument that measures the rate of water evaporation.

[Greek atmos, vapor; see atmosphere + -METER.]

atmometric at'mo·met'ric (-mō-mĕt'rĭk) adj.
atmometry at·mom'e·try n.

evaporimeter (ĭvăp'ərĭm'ətər), instrument that measures the rate of evaporation of water into the atmosphere, sometimes called an atmometer. Evaporimeters are of two types, those that measure the evaporation rate from a free water surface and those that measure it from a continuously wet porous surface. In the first type, the level of water in a tank or pan, often sunk into the ground so that the water surface is at ground level, is measured by a micrometer gauge. After accounting for increases due to rain and decreases due to deliberate draining, the day-to-day decrease in the water level can be attributed to evaporation. In one evaporimeter of the second type, the evaporation rate is computed according to the rate of weight loss of a wet pack of absorbent material. The Piché evaporimeter uses an inverted graduated cylinder of water with a filter-paper seal at the mouth. Evaporation takes place from the wet filter paper and thus depletes the water in the cylinder, so that the rate of evaporation can be read directly from the graduations marking the water level. The Livingston sphere, another evaporimeter of the second type, uses a wet ceramic sphere as the evaporating surface to simulate evaporation rates from vegetation. Because evaporation rates are so sensitive to the water supply, and the nature of the evaporating surface, data collected by evaporimeters often do not reflect true evaporation processes; hence, evaporimeters have limited use.


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Atmometer.jpg

The atmometer or evaporimeter is a scientific instrument used for measuring the rate of evaporation from a wet surface to the atmosphere. It was invented by either the Dutch scientist Pieter van Musschenbroek (1692–1761)[1] or the Scottish mathematician and engineer Sir John Leslie (1766–1832).

A simple set up may be made by use of a porous flat plate-like object (a filter paper, for example) which can draw water from an easily measurable source (a graduated cylinder, for example) via a wick of some sort. As water evaporates from the surface, it tends to draw more water from the source through the wick by capillary action to replace the water lost by evaporation. By periodic measurements of the quantity of water remaining in the graduated cylinder, a rate of evaporation can be established. Also, using the surface area of the plate, we can establish a rate of evaporation per unit area.

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  1. ^ http://www.dbnl.org/tekst/aa__001biog15_01/aa__001biog15_01_0974.php A.J. van der Aa, Biographisch woordenboek der Nederlanden. Deel 12. Tweede stuk. J.J. van Brederode, Haarlem 1869



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Piche evaporimeter (engineering)
evaporation pan (engineering)
clay atmometer (engineering)
Livingstone sphere (engineering)