Understanding pressure with barometer as example

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dhruv96patel
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In a barometer where a tube filled with mercury is inverted in dish filled with mercury, the mercury in the tube is suspended/rises to 760 mm mark. I read this is due to pressure of weight of mercury being equal to pressure of atmosphere.

My question is that, if i were to take the tube out of dish, will the mercury still stay in as atmosphere pressure has not changed.
Whats the physics behind pipettes in which the liquid stays suspended and does not flow out even when its removed from the dish?

For this, my view of pressure is that in barometer, mercury molecules exposed to surface are under force of atmosphere and mercury molecules exert same force back and consequently have same pressure through out mercury in dish. When the tube containing mercury is put in dish, the mercury in tube applies force to mercury in dish and force of mercury in tube is greater. Thus, mercury flows out until its mass decreases enough so that force of mercury in tube equals that of mercury in dish. And this seems to happen when mercury is 760 mm high in tube at atmospheric pressure.

If my microscopic view is flawed, please correct it. And answer my question according to correct microscopic view of pressure.
 
on Phys.org
Try the experiment yourself.
BUT use something less volatile than mercury ... say water in a tube, in a dish of water

My question is that, if i were to take the tube out of dish, will the mercury still stay in as atmosphere pressure has not changed.
Whats the physics behind pipettes in which the liquid stays suspended and does not flow out even when its removed from the dish?

Ahhh but will it really ?
pull the tube up out of the dish of water and see what happens
Consider the airpressure on the surface of the dish of liquid, and what effect it has on the column of liquid in the tube :)

Dave
 
k so pressure on surface of dish would be same as atmospheric pressure 1 atm. pressure in tube at top would be 0 as its vacuum. So mercury stays suspended. But if i take the tube filled with mercury out of dish, pressure in tube at top will still be 0 and pressure at opening of tube (since its in contact with air) will be 1 atm. so shouldn't mercury still stay in and not flow out when i take the tube out of dish?
 
There are two other forces you need to consider: surface tension (which is what keeps the liquid in the pipette) and gravity (which is what will make the mecury fall out of the tube).
 
Thanks a Lot every one!