How did Farenheit decide there should be 180 degrees between freezing and boiling, let alone 212
for boiling and 32 for freezing?
Asked by: Tom Vandor
Answer
There are many suggestions as to how the scale was derived I am not sure if any one
really knows.
My favourite story is that Farenheit made his thermometer without a scale.
He then placed it in a beaker of ice and salt, waited for the mercury to fall and marked
this point as '0'. He then measured his own body temperature, marked this point as '100'
and then divided the distance between them evenly. By extending the scale upwards the
boiling point of water occurred at the 212th graduation. A variation on this tale is that
0 degrees was the temperature of his cellar in the winter.
The salt/ice mixture & body temperature reference points where chosen as these where seen
to be constant (an early use of referring to a 'universal' constant accessible to anyone
who needs to check the calibration of their instrument). Farenheit thought that the
ice/salt mixture was as cold as you could get and that everyone's body temperature was
constant. We now know that both these theories where flawed. Indeed, it is thought that
Farenheit was ill when he measured his body temperature as the temperature of a healthy
person is approx 97.8F.
Answered by: Martin Collins, B.S., Chemist, Hull UK
'Knowledge can be communicated, but not wisdom. One can find it, live it, be fortified by it, do wonders through it, but one cannnot communicate and teach it.'