The water barometer is the oldest form of barometer and a very basic form of a barometer for that matter. The water barometer was the invention of Goethe and is also known as the Goethe barometer. Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe also known as simply Goethe was the one that invented the first water barometer. Most of the antique barometers are based on the principle of the water barometer - meaning they're liquid based. When it was invented the Goethe barometer or the water barometer was one of the most precise tools you could lay your hands on and use for weather forecasting. As time has passed they've found that water - as pure as it might be - isn't as sensitive to atmospheric pressure changes as mercury, and so the mercury barometer was introduced. The weather barometer didn't really have a long life span as the inventors of that time quickly figured out that it wasn't a very precise tool but it was still a pretty good start. If you really are interested in learning more about the water barometer I suggest visiting Wikipedia and searching there. Although we've pretty much got it covered in this article if you're really keen on learning more about the water barometer and who invented it I suggest reading our article about the Goethe barometer - and if that doesn't satisfy your curiosity you can always go to Wikipedia. As a short summary the water based barometer was a simple tool used to forecast the weather ...
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A weather glass barometer is more of a do-it-yourself project as it requires only basic materials that we can usually find around the house. If you are constructing one of these during a spell of bad weather, you will have to wait until the weather improves to see how the barometer acts. Rising atmospheric pressure as a high moves in will press with more force on the surface of the water and push the column of water in the bottle to a higher level. The only materials you'll need to build a weather glass barometer are: a clear glass jar (about 18 ounces), a clear straight-neck bottle (about 12 ounces), food colorant (whatever color you like, doesn't really matter), a rubber band. STEP 1: Get a bottle with a straight-neck and a jar that is tall enough for the bottle to sit in upside down without having the neck touch the jar's bottom. Also, the bottle must not fit so tightly as to form an air-tight seal - so take that into consideration when picking out the bottle and jar. Remove all labels, clean the bottle and jar, and flip the bottle upside down into the jar. STEP 2: Fill the jar with enough water to come up just over the mouth of the bottle by an inch or a little more. Add a few drops of food coloring - useful only for visual glamour. Tip the bottle and jar enough to let a little air escape from the bottle so that the liquid ...
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