Sign In

13.7 : Pressure Gauges

Most pressure gauges, like those on scuba tanks, are calibrated to read zero at atmospheric pressure. Readings from such gauges are called the gauge pressure, which is the pressure relative to atmospheric pressure. When the pressure inside the tank exceeds atmospheric pressure, the gauge reports a positive value. Some gauges are designed to measure negative pressure. For example, many physics experiments must take place in a vacuum chamber, a rigid chamber from which some of the air is pumped out. The pressure inside the vacuum chamber is lower than the ambient atmospheric pressure, so the pressure gauge on the chamber reads a negative value.

The absolute pressure is the sum of gauge pressure and atmospheric pressure. The absolute pressure in fluids cannot be negative. There are various devices that are used for measuring pressure, ranging from tire gauges to blood pressure monitors. Many other types of pressure gauges, such as manometers and barometers, are commonly used to test the pressure of fluids. Some other types of pressure gauges include strain gauges, capacitance pressure gauges, piezoelectric pressure gauges, and ion gauges, which measure pressure by ionizing molecules in highly evacuated chambers. Different pressure gauges are useful in various pressure ranges and under different physical situations.

Tags
Pressure GaugesGauge PressureAbsolute PressureNegative PressureAtmospheric PressureVacuum ChamberManometersBarometersTire GaugesBlood Pressure MonitorsStrain GaugesCapacitance Pressure GaugesPiezoelectric Pressure GaugesIon Gauges

From Chapter 13:

article

Now Playing

13.7 : Pressure Gauges

Fluid Mechanics

1.8K Views

article

13.1 : Characteristics of Fluids

Fluid Mechanics

2.6K Views

article

13.2 : Density

Fluid Mechanics

9.9K Views

article

13.3 : Pressure of Fluids

Fluid Mechanics

8.9K Views

article

13.4 : Variation of Atmospheric Pressure

Fluid Mechanics

1.6K Views

article

13.5 : Pascal's Law

Fluid Mechanics

6.3K Views

article

13.6 : Application of Pascal's Law

Fluid Mechanics

6.4K Views

article

13.8 : Buoyancy

Fluid Mechanics

4.1K Views

article

13.9 : Archimedes' Principle

Fluid Mechanics

6.1K Views

article

13.10 : Density and Archimedes' Principle

Fluid Mechanics

6.0K Views

article

13.11 : Accelerating Fluids

Fluid Mechanics

840 Views

article

13.12 : Surface Tension and Surface Energy

Fluid Mechanics

984 Views

article

13.13 : Excess Pressure Inside a Drop and a Bubble

Fluid Mechanics

1.2K Views

article

13.14 : Contact Angle

Fluid Mechanics

1.9K Views

article

13.15 : Rise of Liquid in a Capillary Tube

Fluid Mechanics

732 Views

See More

JoVE Logo

Privacy

Terms of Use

Policies

Research

Education

ABOUT JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. All rights reserved