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Venturi effect
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===Differential pressure=== {{main|Pressure head}} As fluid flows through a Venturi, the expansion and compression of the fluids cause the pressure inside the Venturi to change. This principle can be used in [[metrology]] for gauges calibrated for differential pressures. This type of pressure measurement may be more convenient, for example, to measure fuel or combustion pressures in jet or rocket engines. The first large-scale Venturi meters to measure liquid flows were developed by [[Clemens Herschel]] who used them to measure small and large flows of water and wastewater beginning at the end of the 19th century.<ref>Herschel, Clemens. (1898). ''Measuring Water.'' Providence, RI:Builders Iron Foundry.</ref> While working for the [[Holyoke Water Power Company]], Herschel would develop the means for measuring these flows to determine the water power consumption of different mills on the [[Holyoke Canal System]], first beginning development of the device in 1886, two years later he would describe his invention of the Venturi meter to [[William Unwin]] in a letter dated June 5, 1888.<ref>{{cite journal|page=254|volume=136|issue=3433|date=August 17, 1935|journal=Nature|doi=10.1038/136254a0|title=Invention of the Venturi Meter|bibcode=1935Natur.136Q.254.|doi-access=free}}</ref>
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