Émile Hilaire Amagat (2 January 1841 in Saint-Satur – 15 February 1915) was a French physicist.[1] His doctoral thesis, published in 1872, expanded on the work of Thomas Andrews, and included plots of the isotherms of carbon dioxide at high pressures.[2] Amagat published a paper in 1877 that contradicted the current understanding at the time, concluding that the coefficient of compressibility of fluids decreased with increasing pressure.[2] He continued to publish data on isotherms for a number of different gases between 1879 and 1882,[2] and invented the hydraulic manometer, which was able to withstand up to 3200 atmospheres, as opposed to 400 atmospheres using a glass apparatus.[3] In 1880 he published his law of partial volumes, now known as Amagat's law.
For his studies, he developed many original piezometer devices. His originality went so far as to use the depth of a mine shaft being drilled to reach high pressures of 430 atmospheres in order to study the equations of state of certain gases.[4] His expertise led him to collaborate with the physicist Peter Tait in the development of a piezometer suitable for measuring the compressibility of liquids.[5]
^Payen, J. (1970). "Amagat, Émile". In Gillispie, C. C. (ed.). Dictionary of Scientific Biography. Vol. 1. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. pp. 128–129. ISBN978-0-68410-114-9. OCLC89822..
^Boyle, R.; Amagat, E. H. (1899). The Laws of Gases. Harper's Scientific Memoirs. Vol. V. Translated by Barus, C. New York: Harper & Brothers Publishers. p. 107. OCLC1738914. OL14018425M.