Cyanometer

Word CYANOMETER
Character 10
Hyphenation cy a nom e ter
Pronunciations N/A

Definitions and meanings of "Cyanometer"

What do we mean by cyanometer?

Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word cyanometer. Define cyanometer, cyanometer synonyms, cyanometer pronunciation, cyanometer translation, English dictionary definition of cyanometer.

Synonyms and Antonyms for Cyanometer

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The word "cyanometer" in example sentences

He also developed numerous other instruments, including the manometer, cyanometer, diaphonometer, anemometer and mountain eudiometer, the first electrometer (1766), a device for measuring electric potential by means of attraction or repulsion of charged bodies, and the first hygrometer, utilizing a human hair to measure humidity (1783). ❋ Unknown (2009)

The sky color shifts in value from zenith to horizon, too, as we can see when the cyanometer is arrayed vertically. ❋ James Gurney (2008)

I took a single paint swatch, cut it in half, and taped the symmetrical halves on a mirror to make a device that we can call a "cyanometer." ❋ James Gurney (2008)

He would study geology in the field, and took Saussure in his trunk he would note meteorology: he made a cyanometer -- a scale of blue to measure the depth of tone, the colour whether of Rhine-water or of Alpine skies. ❋ Unknown (1893)

Its intensity at the zenith appeared to correspond to 41° of the cyanometer. ❋ Unknown (1851)

It corresponded only to 12 degrees of the cyanometer. ❋ Alexander Von Humboldt (1814)

Thermometer 21; hygrometer 39.3; cyanometer 16 degrees. ❋ Alexander Von Humboldt (1814)

This intensity, measured with the cyanometer of Saussure, was found from November to January generally 18, never above 20 degrees. ❋ Alexander Von Humboldt (1814)

Its intensity at the zenith appeared to correspond to 41 degrees of the cyanometer. ❋ Alexander Von Humboldt (1814)

Saussure, Horace Bénédict de, _Essai sur Hygrométrie_, inventor of the cyanometer, _vi. ❋ George Gordon Byron Byron (1806)

He would study geology in the field, and took Saussure in his trunk he would note meteorology: he made a cyanometer ” a scale of blue to measure the depth of tone, the colour whether of Rhine-water or of Alpine skies. ❋ Collingwood, W G (1911)

[* At noon, thermometer in the shade 23.7 (in the sun, out of the wind, 30. 4°); De Luc’s hygrometer, 36.2; cyanometer, at the zenith, ❋ Unknown (1851)

* (* At noon, thermometer in the shade 23.7 (in the sun, out of the wind, 30.4 degrees); De Luc's hygrometer, 36.2; cyanometer, at the zenith, 12, at the horizon 9 degrees. ❋ Alexander Von Humboldt (1814)

See "Journal," November 22, 1813.] {216} [268] [The cyanometer, an instrument for ascertaining the intensity of the blue colour of the sky, was invented by Horace Bénédict de ❋ George Gordon Byron Byron (1806)

Cross Reference for Cyanometer

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