Yes, Mercury is an element that is commonly found in old thermometers. It is a liquid metal at room temperature and is known for its characteristic silvery appearance and high toxicity. Mercury has a variety of industrial and commercial applications, including its use in thermometers.
The liquid in which a thermometer is typically dipped is called mercury. Mercury is commonly used in old-style thermometers, but newer thermometers may use alcohol or other liquids instead.
Contributed by 1st grader Mackenzie and her mom Julie: There are circle thermometers which are like a clock and you read the numbers from left to right. There are stick thermometers that go under your tongue, your arm pit or other body parts. The numbers go from bottom to top. There are digital thermometers that can go in your ear, on your finger or other body parts. There are inside thermometers and outside thermometers to tell the general warmth/coolness of the space/environment. There are different scales - Fahrenheit and Celsius. Thermometers may be used to take a person's body temperature, to tell how warm/cold it is outside or in a room, to test whether food is cooked to a desired temperature to be safe. We hope we helped you.
The element found in the title "Arsenic and Old Lace" is the poisonous substance arsenic, which is often associated with murder plots in mystery stories.
"Because it's silver in color, and runs quickly thru your fingers." Actually, this is not correct. Contrary to popular belief, it is not called quicksilver because it runs quickly through your fingers. The "silver" part is actually because of the colour but the "quick" part comes from the old English translation of the Latin word for living. The name means "living silver". See the related link below.
Yes, mercury can be heated up. Heat energy will cause mercury atoms to move more and spread out. This is actually how old thermometers would work. The higher the temperature, the more the particles would move and the more the liquid would expand. This would fill up the glass tube on the thermometer and make it possible to tell the temperature.
Old fashioned thermometers and in tuna.
mercury was found in an old Egyptian tomb around 1500 BC meaning Before christ
Mercury was used in old thermometers because mercury expands when it reaches a certain temperature, so it was a really good "gauge". Now, they stopped making thermometers with mercury as the liquid since it was very poisonous. i hope you liked the answer!
The liquid in which a thermometer is typically dipped is called mercury. Mercury is commonly used in old-style thermometers, but newer thermometers may use alcohol or other liquids instead.
A:Mercury (Hg) was the element which was discovered.
Mercury has the chemical symbol Hg. It is a transition metal that is commonly known for its unique physical properties, such as being a liquid at room temperature. Mercury has a variety of uses, including in thermometers, barometers, and fluorescent lights.
Mercury. Note: mercury is very toxic. If you find mercury (for example, if you break an old mercury thermometer), check with your local poison control center for instructions to dispose of it safely.
an element that i think is a very old poison is mercury Antimony Arsenic Bismuth Mercury Copper Cadmium and Lead are all poisonous and used in old paint
Mercury is a liquid metal that is used in thermometers.
Mercury
It depends on the thermometer. An old-style liquid thermometer might contain: * mercury (silvery) * alcohol (usually dyed red or blue for visibility) * an alloy of sodium and potassium (silvery) * an alloy of gallium, indium, and tin (silvery) * any of a number of other things depending on the temperature range to be measured Electronic thermometers contain a thermocouple plus electronics to turn the potential generated by the thermocouple into a temperature reading.
In the past, Mercury was used in ALL thermometers, oral or rectal for human use. But Mercury poses health risks. So they changed the internal workings to electronic components.As an historical point of view, when I grew up, all thermometers contained mercury enclosed in thin glass. If the thermometer was dropped, it could easily break. Mercury when spilled is attracted to it's own droplets. So although the mercury spilled out, it formed little round silver balls that could easily be pushed together, separated again, and pushed back together---all with one finger! Children delighted in "playing" with it, until the droplets rolled around in enough dust that they did not attract to each other as well. Then, we pushed the remaining balls onto a piece of paper and threw it into the regular garbage, which was then burned outdoors or in the coal furnace. After 1980s, they began making thermometers without mercury from fears about mercury toxicity and mercury poisoning. (But plenty of people now over 50 years old never experienced bad effects from playing with mercury droplets.)