Named after Francis Beaufort, the Beaufort Scale measures the wind speed as observed at sea or on land.
The Mohs mineral scale was named after German mineralogist Frederich Mohs (1773-1839)
The temperature scale named after its inventor that goes from 0 to 100 degrees is the Celsius scale, named after the Swedish astronomer Anders Celsius.
The Mohs hardness scale is named after Friedrich Mohs, a German geologist and mineralogist who created the scale in 1812. It is used to determine the relative hardness of minerals by their ability to scratch each other.
The Kelvin temperature scale is named after the Belfast-born physicist William Thomson,1st Boron Kelvin. The Celsius scale of temperature is named after the Swedish astronomer Anders Celsius. He had developed a similar temperature scale though not the same one.
The Mohs scale of mineral hardness is named after Friedrich Mohs, who developed it. The Rockwell scale of metal hardness is named after Hugh and Stanley Rockwell, who created the machine that measures it. Hugh and Stanley Rockwell aren't directly related to each other. The Shore Durometer scale for measuring the hardness of elastomeric materials like rubber is named after Albert Shore, who invented the measuring device called the durometer.
Maybe, who knows. its just a question-go google it
It is named after the man who invented it: Dr. Tetsuya Fujita.
The temperature scale is Fahrenheit, named for its inventor, Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit.
The temperature scale is Fahrenheit, named for scientist Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit.
The Fahrenheit temperature scale is named after Daniel Fahrenheit, born in Poland in 1686.
It boiled on the scale devised by Gabriel Fahrenheit, and it was named "Fahrenheit" in his honor.
The Fujita scale is used to rate the intensity of tornadoes from F0 to F5 based on damage. It is named for its creator Dr. Tetsuya Theodore Fujita.