Say Goodbye to the Physical Kilogram (and Perhaps much More)

Posted by Andy_Updegrove on May 22, 2019 6:15 AM EDT
ConsortiumInfo.org Standards Blog; By Andy Updegrove
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Advances in science offer increasing degrees of precision, but usually at ever-increasing cost. And not just in terms of millions of dollars of complex instrumentation.

Once upon a time we lived in a society that was not only completely analog but infinitely simpler. A time when it seemed the physical world could be understood and described, perhaps even tamed, purely through the application of rational thought. Contemporaries dubbed that era the Age of Enlightenment and looked forward to the wonders that this brave new world would bring. This week, one of the last icons of that heady time was dethroned and retired to a museum in Paris.

I am speaking, of course, about the kilogram, the last of the seven International System of Units to be represented by a physical object rather than an “invariant constant of nature.” But where did it come from? And why, after more than two hundred twenty years, has it been replaced?

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