Dasymeter
[Image:Dasymeter bei Normaldruck.png|thumb|Dasymeter at standard pressure]
[Image:Dasymeter unter Vakuum.png|thumb|Dasymeter at reduced pressure]
[Image:Baroskop.png|thumb|Historical drawing of a dasymeter (in German: "Fig. 109. Baroscope. (Apparatus for proving the buoyancy of air)")]
A dasymeter was meant initially as a device to demonstrate the buoyant effect of gases like air. A dasymeter which allows weighing acts as a densimeter used to measure the density of gases.
Principle
The Principle of Archimedes permits to derive a formula which does not rely on any information of volume: a sample, the big sphere in the adjacent images, of known mass-density is weighed in vacuum and then immersed into the gas and weighed again.From the known mass density of the sample and its two weight-values, the mass-density of the gas can be calculated as: