Problems in Physics. [taken Chiefly From Dr. Fliedner's Aufgaben Aus Der Physik]

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VIII. What under the same conditions would be the height H oi & place above the surface of the sea, where the barometer stands at 324 Paris lines ?
IX. If the extreme confines of the air be taken at a point where the tension is balanced by a column of mer- cury of iJo of a Paris line in height, what then, according to the conditions of the previous problems, would be the height Ho£ the upper limit of the air?
X. With the conditions of Problem VIII. required to determine the difference in height
... between two places, when the barometer stands at the lower at B and at the upper at 6 ?
More accurately than by the formula above given, the difference in height H between the two places is found by the following formula from Gauss : — H= C. (1 + 0.0026 COS. 2 ^ [1+ ^ (T-f J)] (log. 5 — log. 6) in which C is a constant factor = 56588 for Paris foot, or = 18382 for metre, * B the barometric height of the ^ower station, b " , " " " upper station, in any measurement only reduced to 0°.
T the temperature of the air and the mercury at the lower station, t the temperature of the air and the mercury at the upper station, the geographical latitude.


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