Category: popular meteorology

Come see our Water Barometer @ Flux Science Fair

Two Weekends: June 5-6/12-13, 12-6 PM

Science Fair @ Flux Factory
39-21 29th Street, Long Island City

Featuring a WATER BAROMETER
by SP Weather Station in collaboration with Daniel Robie

The first barometer wasn’t invented to measure air pressure.  In the 17th century, columns of water were used to disprove the church’s position that a true vacuum was impossible.  What people found (eventually) is that water can only be raised about 33 feet from the ground with any suction pump.  Galileo’s protege Evangelista Torricelli realized that such a column could be used to measure changes in the air.  He also realized that a much denser fluid, such as mercury, registers those changes on a much smaller (more scientifically convenient) scale.

Who needs convenience? At Flux Factory for the first two weekends in June, SPWS and Dan Robie, Assistant Professor of Chemistry, York College, CUNY, are measuring pressure with a tube of water the height of Flux Factory, in homage to the barometer’s history.  Come find out if it works!

Weather (Book) Report: 6 shelves of wonder!

(note: we’ll have a feature soon on Jane Marsching’s Guest Lecture Saturday at the Queens Museum, but in the meantime…)

A quick visual survey of the circulating weather section at the NYPL Science, Industry and Business Library:

Interestingly, alarmist weather books are not at all limited to those centered on climate change.  It seems it could be an entire literary subgenre.

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