Barometer Planet: How a Barometer Works

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    Barometer Works
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Mercury rises in a barometer tube due to atmospheric pressure acting on the mercury in the basin. When atmospheric pressure increases, it pushes down on the mercury, causing it to rise in the tube. In a vacuum, there would be no pressure to push the mercury up, resulting in it pooling at the bottom. The principle is similar to how drinking through a straw works, where atmospheric pressure pushes liquid up. Understanding this mechanism is crucial for grasping how barometers measure atmospheric pressure.
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[PLAIN]http://www.barometerplanet.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/09/merc_barometer.jpg

What makes mercury rise in the tube?Does atmospheric pressure carries the mercury in the tube?Is that true?
 
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Misr said:
[PLAIN]http://www.barometerplanet.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/09/merc_barometer.jpg

What makes mercury rise in the tube?Does atmospheric pressure carries the mercury in the tube?Is that true?

Think about what would happen if the whole thermometer were in vacuum. The mercury would have no reason to climb the tube; it would just pool at the bottom. Vacuum inside, vacuum outside.

Now, push down a little bit on the mercury outside the tube. It's going to rise up the tube a little.
 
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Yeah,so air pushes on the mercury in this basin,(or whatever it is called)and the mercury in turn pushes up on the mercury of the tube
 
Misr said:
Yeah,so air pushes on the mercury in this basin,(or whatever it is called)and the mercury in turn pushes up on the mercury of the tube

Right. That's also why you can drink through a straw.
 
Ok thanks
 
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