Thermopile used to measure heat production, England, 1930-1940

Made:
1930-1940 in England
Thermopile for measurement of nerve heat production From the top: 1989-158

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Thermopile for measurement of nerve heat production
Science Museum Group
© The Board of Trustees of the Science Museum

From the top: 1989-158
Science Museum Group Collection
© The Board of Trustees of the Science Museum

Thermopile for measurement of nerve heat production, associated with A.V. Hill and J.V. Howarth, originally made 1930-1940, English, modified 1950-1960

Thermopiles are scientific instruments used to measure small changes in heat. These were used by Archibald V Hill (1886-1977), a British physiologist studying the heat produced by nerves and muscles when they are stimulated.

The heat produced is converted to electricity by a series of thermocouples (the two coils of metal which when heated produce an electric current) and recorded using a galvanometer. Hill studied heat and energy exchanges from the 1910s onwards, discovering that heat is produced by nerves and becoming one of the founders of the field of biophysics in the process. The thermopile is shown here with two similar examples (1989-158 and 1989-162).

Details

Category:
Laboratory Medicine
Object Number:
1989-157
Materials:
tufnol and metal
Measurements:
overall: 82 mm x 390 mm x 182 mm, 1.02kg
type:
thermopile
credit:
University College London, Dept. of Physiology