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Emile Hilaire Amagat

French physicist (1841–1915)

Born at Saint-Satur, Amagat obtained his doctorate in 1872 from Paris and became a professor of physics at the Faculté Libre des Sciences at Lyons and eventually a full member of the French Academy of Sciences.

He is noted for his work on the behavior of gases. He started work plotting isotherms of carbon dioxide at high pressures, expanding the results of Thomas Andrews; this research was published in 1872 as his doctoral thesis. In 1877 followed a publication on the coefficient of compressibility of fluids, showing conclusively that this decreased with an increase in pressure, a result contradicting the results of other scientists. Between 1879 and 1882 Amagat investigated a number of gases, publishing data on isotherms and reaching the limit of pressures obtainable using glass apparatus – about 400 atmospheres. To get yet further Amagat invented a hydraulic manometer that could produce and measure up to 3200 atmospheres. (This manometer was later used in firearms factories for testing purposes.)

 
 
Wikipedia: Emile Amagat

Emile Hilaire Amagat (2 January 1841 - 15 February 1915) was a French physicist. He formulated Amagat's law. He was elected a member of the French Academy of Sciences on 9 June 1902.[1]

References

  1. ^ * Payen, Jacques (1970). "Amagat, Émile". Dictionary of Scientific Biography 1. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. 128-129. ISBN 0684101149. .

 
 

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