Jan 25, 2011

Scientists close to new definition of kilogram

LONDON (Reuters) - Scientists say they are close to achieving a 200-year-old goal of creating a universal system of measurements based on stable quantities, as they progress toward changing how the kilogram is defined.
The kilogram is the only base unit in the International System of Units (SI) that is still defined by a physical object — a prototype of platinum-iridium kept in the vaults of the International Bureau of Measurements (BIPM) in France.

The stability of the kilogram is crucial as it forms the basis from which many other units are derived.
But measurements made over more than 100 years suggest that the mass of the international prototype may have changed by about 50 micrograms — the size of a small grain of sand — prompting the BIPM to try to develop a new definition based on a fundamental physical property.
Scientists will gather at the Royal Society, Britain’s national academy of science, on Monday to present their progress on redefining the kilogram according to something called “the Planck constant,” a fundamental constant of quantum physics.
“International consensus has been achieved, that in the near future the kilogram shall be redefined, based on a fixed value of the Planck constant,” Michael Stock, a physicist at the International Bureau of Weights and Measurements (BIPM), said in a statement.
Stock said researchers have been conducting experiments that establish a link between mass and the Planck constant by comparing measurements of electrical and mechanical power. -The Nation