...Hydrometers are the closest for to actual physics IMO
Conductivity would be the method of choice for that and standard method for scientists now a days.
salinity is a physical measurement. It is not the domain of biologists. Biologists and other practitioners of science use salinity. If it of more concern to some branch more than others, the precise measurement of salinity is of most concern to applied physicists and engineers who specialize in understanding material properties and the agencies they work for, such as NIST. And the direct way to measure salinity is through simultaneous measurement of chlorinity (conductance), temperature and pressure. We ignore temperature and pressure in readings because the instruments readouts assume a given temperature and pressure (1 atm generally). Neither refractometers nor hydrometers actually read salinity, they read the properties of saline solutions: either the effect of salinity on bouyancy or light refraction.
- a 'scientist'
edit: sorry, off topic to original post.
I would refer you to An Introduction to the Chemistry of the Sea by Pilson. Excellent book.No where even close to accurate. Consensus will always be the simplest forms of physics. And a needle floating to show actual salinity will always be there most basic form of physics. And also it would be be biologists. "Scientists" is an erroneous definition on it's own.:bounce3:
Great point. In that case you should use titration to measure the g of salts per kg of water since that is the simplest. it directly measures salinity and does not invoke any properties of saline solutions. Or if you got the idea from my post, you can accept there are multiple measurable properties of salinity. The relationships of refraction and buoyancy as a function of temperature, chlorinity and pressure are well known. What you choose is just fine as long as the measurement uncertainty (e.g. observer and instrument) meets your desired accuracy. No reason to sh*t on others for using different instruments. I've noticed from your posts that you tend to be very critical of others who do things in ways other than yours."Neither refractometers nor hydrometers actually read salinity," Pretty sure 99% of the board went WTH!!! After this part. No, they register salinity. The buoyancy of water based on the biological factors which contribute to it's specific gravity.
Completely missed my point. It's called Occam's Razor. It means the simplest and easiest answer is usually the correct one.
I would refer you to An Introduction to the Chemistry of the Sea by Pilson. Excellent book.
Nice. By chance have you looked at JimWelsh's thread on Salinity determination by density? Its not on this forum so I won't post a direct link but a google search with " Salinity determination by density JimWelsh" will return the desired results. Which is the title of the thread and Author.Methods of seawater analysis is good too but written more for wet lab chemists.i t has a chapter on measuring salinity. Still any reefer that is Uber interested in this topic will find good content in there.
I highly suggest that book I just referred to. It's also available on Kindle and is written so most anyone can understand.