Veterinarians use thermometers to measure the internal body temperature of their patients. The internal body temperature, along with heart rate and respiratory rate, gives a general indication of the health status of the animal.
Thermometer use is widespread across various demographics, including age groups, genders, and socioeconomic backgrounds. It is commonly used by parents to monitor their children's health, by healthcare professionals in clinical settings, and by individuals at home to track their own body temperature. With the advent of digital thermometers, the accessibility and convenience of monitoring temperature have increased.
Mercury thermometers are rarely used, except in lab thermometers. For human use, they have been replaced by dyed alcohol glass thermometers, or electronic digital thermometers.
When you need them.
Doctors use body temperature thermometers to measure body temperature.
thermometers
no
how do meteorologist use thermometers
Some thermometers use mercury, in these the liquid is silvery. Some thermometers use a red dyed alcohol solutioin.
Achohol, usually. Older thermometers use mercury, but that is too dangerous.
We ca use thermometers, thermocouples, resistance thermometers, pyrometers etc.
Veterinarians tend to not use quotes, unless that is part of the clinic culture and environment they are trying to create.
thermometers