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 Escutcheons of Science
  Otto von Guericke (1602-1686)

Otto von Guericke (1602-1686).  German physicist and politician
Inventor of the vacuum pump, in 1650.

[ The above copyrighted picture is reproduced here by permission:   © 2008 Jochen Wilke ]

Per fess; [1] Azure a demi-lion Argent.  [2] Gules a rose Argent.


The German physicist  Otto von Guericke  (1602-1686)  invented the  air pump  in 1650.  Blaise Pascal (1623-1662)  had established experimentally the origin of  atmospheric pressure  only three years earlier  (1647)  using the  barometer  invented in 1644 by  Evangelista Torricelli (1608-1647).

Guericke  was also Mayor of  Magdeburg.  To demonstrate the might of atmospheric pressure, he built two matching copper bowls (the Magdeburg hemispheres) 14 inches in diameter, which could be placed in airtight contact to form a hollow sphere from which most of the air could be pumped out.

The longitidinal force holding evacuated 14" Magdeburg hemispheres together is obtained as the product of the atmospheric pressure (about 101325 Pa) into the area of the cross-section  (a disk 14" across has an area of about 0.1 m2 ).  This amounts to a force exceeding 10000 N.  This is more than one ton of thrust...

In 1654, the device was demonstrated dramatically before Emperor Ferdinand III and the Imperial Diet at Regensburg:  After Guericke had pumped (most of) the air out of the "Magdeburg sphere", two teams of horses were not enough to pull apart those hemispheres which only "thin" surrounding air was holding together.

 Magdeburg hemispheres (DDR stamp, 1969)

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