The Galileo thermometer is based on a thermoscope designed by Galileo Galilei. There are multiple bubbles filled with different colored liquids and tags that indicate temperature. They sink or rise when their density changes with the temperature of the water around them. The bubble that sinks the farthest is the most accurate temperature.
there are little glass bubbles filled with a colored liquid, usually food coloring and water oe coloured ethenol. each little bubble has a weight attached with the temperature engraved into it. all these bubbles are about the same density as water, and as the temperature changes, the bubbles float and sink. the bubble that sinks to the bottom is the current temperature.
A Galileo thermometer is a thermometer made of a sealed glass cylinder containing a clear liquid and a series of objects whose densities are such that they rise or fall as the temperature changes.
Galileo Galilei did not invent the thermometer. The thermometer was actually invented by Galileo's contemporary, Galileo's contemporary, Galileo's contemporary, Galileo's contemporary, Galileo's contemporary, Galileo's contemporary, Galileo's contemporary, Galileo's contemporary, Galileo's contemporary, Galileo's contemporary, Galileo's contemporary, Galileo's contemporary, Galileo's contemporary Galileo's contemporary, Galileo Galilei. The thermometer was actually invented by Galileo's contemporary, Galileo's contemporary.
I believe they call it a Galileo thermometer
Thermometer. Various authors have credited the invention of the thermometer to Cornelius Drebbel, Robert Fludd, Galileo Galilei or Santorio Santorio. The thermometer was not a single invention, however, but a development. Galileo Galilei also discovered that objects (glass spheres filled with aqueous alcohol) of slightly different densities would rise and fall, which is nowadays the principle of the Galileo thermometer (shown). Today such thermometers are calibrated to a temperature scale.
there are little glass bubbles filled with a colored liquid, usually food coloring and water oe coloured ethenol. each little bubble has a weight attached with the temperature engraved into it. all these bubbles are about the same density as water, and as the temperature changes, the bubbles float and sink. the bubble that sinks to the bottom is the current temperature.
A Galileo thermometer is a thermometer made of a sealed glass cylinder containing a clear liquid and a series of objects whose densities are such that they rise or fall as the temperature changes.
Galileo made the thermometer in 1593.
Charles WingerThe Thermometer was invented by Galileo Galilei in 1593. His thermometer consisted of water in a glass bulb; the water moved up and down the bulb as the temperature changed.
Galileo Galilei did not invent the thermometer. The thermometer was actually invented by Galileo's contemporary, Galileo's contemporary, Galileo's contemporary, Galileo's contemporary, Galileo's contemporary, Galileo's contemporary, Galileo's contemporary, Galileo's contemporary, Galileo's contemporary, Galileo's contemporary, Galileo's contemporary, Galileo's contemporary, Galileo's contemporary Galileo's contemporary, Galileo Galilei. The thermometer was actually invented by Galileo's contemporary, Galileo's contemporary.
Galileo was the first one to invent the thermometer but another guy made a better thermometer than Galileo butt basically it is Galileo who invented the thermometer
I believe they call it a Galileo thermometer
Thermometer. Various authors have credited the invention of the thermometer to Cornelius Drebbel, Robert Fludd, Galileo Galilei or Santorio Santorio. The thermometer was not a single invention, however, but a development. Galileo Galilei also discovered that objects (glass spheres filled with aqueous alcohol) of slightly different densities would rise and fall, which is nowadays the principle of the Galileo thermometer (shown). Today such thermometers are calibrated to a temperature scale.
John Thermometer
Galileo
Galileo developed the thermoscope, the first instrument to measure temperature qualitatively. It was Sanctorius Sanctorius who devised and added the scale to the thermoscope to measure the temperature quantitatively and since then has been called the thermometer.
No - Daniel Fahrenheit invented the thermometer, or at least took credit for its invention.