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Metric system

The metric system is a system of measurement that succeeded the decimalised system based on the metre that had been introduced in France in the 1790s. The historical development of these systems culminated in the definition of the International System of Units (SI) in the mid-20th century, under the oversight of an international standards body. Adopting the metric system is known as metrication.

A kilogram mass and three metric measuring devices: a tape measure in centimetres, a thermometer in degrees Celsius, and a multimeter that measures potential in volts, current in amperes and resistance in ohms.

The historical evolution of metric systems has resulted in the recognition of several principles. Each of the fundamental dimensions of nature is expressed by a single base unit of measure. The definition of base units has increasingly been realised from natural principles, rather than by copies of physical artefacts. For quantities derived from the fundamental base units of the system, units derived from the base units are used—e.g., the square metre is the derived unit for area, a quantity derived from length. These derived units are coherent, which means that they involve only products of powers of the base units, without empirical factors. For any given quantity whose unit has a special name and symbol, an extended set of smaller and larger units is defined that are related by factors of powers of ten. The unit of time should be the second; the unit of length should be either the metre or a decimal multiple of it; and the unit of mass should be the gram or a decimal multiple of it.

Metric systems have evolved since the 1790s, as science and technology have evolved, in providing a single universal measuring system. Before and in addition to the SI, some other examples of metric systems are the following: the MKS system of units and the MKSA systems, which are the direct forerunners of the SI; the centimetre–gram–second (CGS) system and its subtypes, the CGS electrostatic (cgs-esu) system, the CGS electromagnetic (cgs-emu) system, and their still-popular blend, the Gaussian system; the metre–tonne–second (MTS) system; and the gravitational metric systems, which can be based on either the metre or the centimetre, and either the gram(-force) or the kilogram(-force).

The SI has been adopted as the official system of weights and measures by nearly all nations in the world.

Background

 
Pavillon de Breteuil, Saint-Cloud, France, the home of the metric system since 1875

The French Revolution (1789–99) provided an opportunity for the French to reform their unwieldy and archaic system of many local weights and measures. Charles Maurice de Talleyrand championed a new system based on natural units, proposing to the French National Assembly in 1790 that such a system be developed. Talleyrand had ambitions that a new natural and standardised system would be embraced worldwide, and was keen to involve other countries in its development. Great Britain ignored invitations to co-operate, so the French Academy of Sciences decided in 1791 to go it alone and they set up a commission for the purpose. The commission decided that the standard of length should be based on the size of the Earth. They defined that length to be the 'metre' and its length as one ten-millionth of the length of an Earth quadrant, the length of the meridian arc on the Earth's surface from the equator to the north pole. In 1799, after the arc measurement had been surveyed, the new system was launched in France.[1]: 145–149 

The units of the metric system, originally taken from observable features of nature, are now defined by seven physical constants being given exact numerical values in terms of the units. In the modern form of the International System of Units (SI), the seven base units are: metre for length, kilogram for mass, second for time, ampere for electric current, kelvin for temperature, candela for luminous intensity and mole for amount of substance. These, together with their derived units, can measure any physical quantity. Derived units may have their own unit name, such as the watt (J/s) and lux (cd/m2), or may just be expressed as combinations of base units, such as velocity (m/s) and acceleration (m/s2).[2]

The metric system was designed to have properties that make it easy to use and widely applicable, including units based on the natural world, decimal ratios, prefixes for multiples and sub-multiples, and a structure of base and derived units. It is also a coherent system, which means that its units do not introduce conversion factors not already present in equations relating quantities. It has a property called rationalisation that eliminates certain constants of proportionality in equations of physics.

The metric system is extensible, and new derived units are defined as needed in fields such as radiology and chemistry. For example, the katal, a derived unit for catalytic activity equivalent to one mole per second (1 mol/s), was added in 1999.

Principles

Although the metric system has changed and developed since its inception, its basic concepts have hardly changed. Designed for transnational use, it consisted of a basic set of units of measurement, now known as base units. Derived units were built up from the base units using logical rather than empirical relationships while multiples and submultiples of both base and derived units were decimal-based and identified by a standard set of prefixes.

Realisation

 
The metre was originally defined to be one ten millionth of the distance between the North Pole and the Equator through Paris.[3]

The base units used in a measurement system must be realisable. Each of the definitions of the base units in the SI is accompanied by a defined mise en pratique [practical realisation] that describes in detail at least one way in which the base unit can be measured.[4] Where possible, definitions of the base units were developed so that any laboratory equipped with proper instruments would be able to realise a standard without reliance on an artefact held by another country. In practice, such realisation is done under the auspices of a mutual acceptance arrangement.[5]

In the SI, the standard metre is defined as exactly 1299792458 of the distance that light travels in a second. The realisation of the metre depends in turn on precise realisation of the second. There are both astronomical observation methods and laboratory measurement methods that are used to realise units of the standard metre. Because the speed of light is now exactly defined in terms of the metre, more precise measurement of the speed of light does not result in a more accurate figure for its velocity in standard units, but rather a more accurate definition of the metre. The accuracy of the measured speed of light is considered to be within 1 m/s, and the realisation of the metre is within about 3 parts in 1000000000, or a relative accuracy of 3×10−9.

The kilogram was originally defined as the mass of one cubic decimetre of water at 4 °C, standardized as the mass of a man-made artefact of platinum–iridium held in a laboratory in France, which was used until a new definition was introduced in May 2019. Replicas made in 1879 at the time of the artefact's fabrication and distributed to signatories of the Metre Convention serve as de facto standards of mass in those countries. Additional replicas have been fabricated since as additional countries have joined the convention. The replicas were subject to periodic validation by comparison to the original, called the IPK. It became apparent that either the IPK or the replicas or both were deteriorating, and are no longer comparable: they had diverged by 50 μg since fabrication, so figuratively, the accuracy of the kilogram was no better than 5 parts in a hundred million or a relative accuracy of 5×10−8. The accepted redefinition of SI base units replaced the IPK with an exact definition of the Planck constant as expressed in SI units, which defines the kilogram in terms of fundamental constants.

Base and derived unit structure

The metric system base units were originally adopted because they represented fundamental orthogonal dimensions of measurement corresponding to how we perceive nature: a spatial dimension, a time dimension, one for inertia, and later, a more subtle one for the dimension of an "invisible substance" known as electricity or more generally, electromagnetism. One and only one unit in each of these dimensions was defined, unlike older systems where multiple perceptual quantities with the same dimension were prevalent, like inches, feet and yards or ounces, pounds and tons. Units for other quantities like area and volume, which are also spatial dimensional quantities, were derived from the fundamental ones by logical relationships, so that a unit of square area for example, was the unit of length squared.

Many derived units were already in use before and during the time the metric system evolved, because they represented convenient abstractions of whatever base units were defined for the system, especially in the sciences. So analogous units were scaled in terms of the units of the newly established metric system, and their names adopted into the system. Many of these were associated with electromagnetism. Other perceptual units, like volume, which were not defined in terms of base units, were incorporated into the system with definitions in the metric base units, so that the system remained simple. It grew in number of units, but the system retained a uniform structure.

Decimal ratios

Some customary systems of weights and measures have duodecimal (base-12) ratios, which means quantities are divisible by 2, 3, 4, and 6. The temporal system of hour–minute–second has sexagesimal (base-60) ratios, which is divisible by an extra integer of 5[Note 1] in addition to the divisors of 2,[Note 2] 3,[Note 3] 4,[Note 4] and 6[Note 5] of the duodecimal ratios, which is actually also the half-day–hour ratio.

However, these systems of measures rarely stick to one constant ratio. As mentioned above, the ratio of a day to an hour is 24, unequal to the hour-to-minute or the minute-to-second ratio of 60. Similarly, the foot-to-inch ratio is 12, which is fourfold of the yard-to-foot ratio. A stone is 14 pounds but a pound is 16 ounces. There is no system of notation for successive fractions in these units: for example, 1/14 of 1/14 of a stone is not an ounce or a multiple of any unit.

Even though any system of counting in a constant ratio has the algebraic property of multiplicative closure (a fraction of a fraction, or a multiple of a fraction is a quantity in the system), the decimal ratios as the predominant counting ratios in most human societies. Naturally, a decimal radix became the ratio between unit sizes of the metric system. In the decimal system, 1/10 of 1/10 is 1/100, which is also within the same decimal system.

Prefixes for multiples and submultiples

In the metric system, multiples and submultiples of units follow a decimal pattern.[Note 6]

Prefix Symbol Factor Power
tera T 1000000000000 1012
giga G 1000000000 109
mega M 1000000 106
kilo k 1000 103
hecto h 100 102
deca da 10 101
(none) (none) 1 100
deci d 0.1 10−1
centi c 0.01 10−2
milli m 0.001 10−3
micro μ 0.000001 10−6
nano n 0.000000001 10−9
pico p 0.000000000001 10−12

A common set of decimal-based prefixes that have the effect of multiplication or division by an integer power of ten can be applied to units that are themselves too large or too small for practical use. The concept of using consistent classical (Latin or Greek) names for the prefixes was first proposed in a report by the French Revolutionary Commission on Weights and Measures in May 1793.[3]: 89–96  The prefix kilo, for example, is used to multiply the unit by 1000, and the prefix milli is to indicate a one-thousandth part of the unit. Thus the kilogram and kilometre are a thousand grams and metres respectively, and a milligram and millimetre are one thousandth of a gram and metre respectively. These relations can be written symbolically as:[6]

1 mg = 0.001 g
1 km = 1000 m

In the early days, multipliers that were positive powers of ten were given Greek-derived prefixes such as kilo- and mega-, and those that were negative powers of ten were given Latin-derived prefixes such as centi- and milli-. However, 1935 extensions to the prefix system did not follow this convention: the prefixes nano- and micro-, for example have Greek roots.[1]: 222–223  During the 19th century the prefix myria-, derived from the Greek word μύριοι (mýrioi), was used as a multiplier for 10000.[7]

When applying prefixes to derived units of area and volume that are expressed in terms of units of length squared or cubed, the square and cube operators are applied to the unit of length including the prefix, as illustrated below.[6]

1 mm2 (square millimetre) = (1 mm)2  = (0.001 m)2  = 0.000001 m2
1 km2 (square kilometre = (1 km)2 = (1000 m)2 = 1000000 m2
1 mm3 (cubic millimetre) = (1 mm)3 = (0.001 m)3 = 0.000000001 m3
1 km3 (cubic kilometre) = (1 km)3 = (1000 m)3 = 1000000000 m3

Prefixes are not usually used to indicate multiples of a second greater than 1; the non-SI units of minute, hour and day are used instead. On the other hand, prefixes are used for multiples of the non-SI unit of volume, the litre (l, L) such as millilitres (ml).[6]

Coherence

 
James Clerk Maxwell played a major role in developing the concept of a coherent CGS system and in extending the metric system to include electrical units.

Each variant of the metric system has a degree of coherence—the derived units are directly related to the base units without the need for intermediate conversion factors.[8] For example, in a coherent system the units of force, energy and power are chosen so that the equations

force = mass × acceleration
energy = force × distance
energy = power × time

hold without the introduction of unit conversion factors. Once a set of coherent units have been defined, other relationships in physics that use those units will automatically be true. Therefore, Einstein's mass–energy equation, E = mc2, does not require extraneous constants when expressed in coherent units.[9]

The CGS system had two units of energy, the erg that was related to mechanics and the calorie that was related to thermal energy; so only one of them (the erg) could bear a coherent relationship to the base units. Coherence was a design aim of SI, which resulted in only one unit of energy being defined – the joule.[10]

Rationalisation

Maxwell's equations of electromagnetism contained a factor relating to steradians, representative of the fact that electric charges and magnetic fields may be considered to emanate from a point and propagate equally in all directions, i.e. spherically. This factor appeared awkwardly in many equations of physics dealing with the dimensionality of electromagnetism and sometimes other things.

Common metric systems

A number of different metric system have been developed, all using the Mètre des Archives and Kilogramme des Archives (or their descendants) as their base units, but differing in the definitions of the various derived units.

Variants of the metric system
Quantity SI/MKS CGS MTS
distance, displacement,
length, height, etc.
(d, x, l, h, etc.)
metre (m) centimetre (cm) metre
mass (m) kilogram (kg) gram (g) tonne (t)
time (t) second (s) second second
speed, velocity (v, v) m/s cm/s m/s
acceleration (a) m/s2 gal (Gal) m/s2
force (F) newton (N) dyne (dyn) sthene (sn)
pressure (P or p) pascal (Pa) barye (Ba) pièze (pz)
energy (E, Q, W) joule (J) erg (erg) kilojoule (kJ)
power (P) watt (W) erg/s kilowatt (kW)
viscosity (μ) Pa⋅s poise (P) pz⋅s

Gaussian second and the first mechanical system of units

In 1832, Gauss used the astronomical second as a base unit in defining the gravitation of the earth, and together with the gram and millimetre, became the first system of mechanical units.

Centimetre–gram–second systems

The centimetre–gram–second system of units (CGS) was the first coherent metric system, having been developed in the 1860s and promoted by Maxwell and Thomson. In 1874, this system was formally promoted by the British Association for the Advancement of Science (BAAS).[11] The system's characteristics are that density is expressed in g/cm3, force expressed in dynes and mechanical energy in ergs. Thermal energy was defined in calories, one calorie being the energy required to raise the temperature of one gram of water from 15.5 °C to 16.5 °C. The meeting also recognised two sets of units for electrical and magnetic properties – the electrostatic set of units and the electromagnetic set of units.[12]

The EMU, ESU and Gaussian systems of electrical units

Several systems of electrical units were defined following discovery of Ohm's law in 1824.

International System of Electrical and Magnetic Units

The CGS units of electricity were cumbersome to work with. This was remedied at the 1893 International Electrical Congress held in Chicago by defining the "international" ampere and ohm using definitions based on the metre, kilogram and second.[13]

Other early electromagnetic systems of units

During the same period in which the CGS system was being extended to include electromagnetism, other systems were developed, distinguished by their choice of coherent base unit, including the Practical System of Electric Units, or QES (quad–eleventhgram–second) system, was being used.[14]: 268 [15]: 17  Here, the base units are the quad, equal to 107 m (approximately a quadrant of the earth's circumference), the eleventhgram, equal to 10−11 g, and the second. These were chosen so that the corresponding electrical units of potential difference, current and resistance had a convenient magnitude.

MKS and MKSA systems

In 1901, Giovanni Giorgi showed that by adding an electrical unit as a fourth base unit, the various anomalies in electromagnetic systems could be resolved. The metre–kilogram–second–coulomb (MKSC) and metre–kilogram–second–ampere (MKSA) systems are examples of such systems.[16]

The International System of Units (Système international d'unités or SI) is the current international standard metric system and is also the system most widely used around the world. It is an extension of Giorgi's MKSA system – its base units are the metre, kilogram, second, ampere, kelvin, candela and mole.[10] The MKS (metre–kilogram–second) system came into existence in 1889, when artefacts for the metre and kilogram were fabricated according to the Metre Convention. Early in the 20th century, an unspecified electrical unit was added, and the system was called MKSX. When it became apparent that the unit would be the ampere, the system was referred to as the MKSA system, and was the direct predecessor of the SI.

Metre–tonne–second systems

The metre–tonne–second system of units (MTS) was based on the metre, tonne and second – the unit of force was the sthène and the unit of pressure was the pièze. It was invented in France for industrial use and from 1933 to 1955 was used both in France and in the Soviet Union.[17][18]

Gravitational systems

Gravitational metric systems use the kilogram-force (kilopond) as a base unit of force, with mass measured in a unit known as the hyl, Technische Masseneinheit (TME), mug or metric slug.[19] Although the CGPM passed a resolution in 1901 defining the standard value of acceleration due to gravity to be 980.665 cm/s2, gravitational units are not part of the International System of Units (SI).[20]

International System of Units

The International System of Units is the modern metric system. It is based on the metre–kilogram–second–ampere (MKSA) system of units from early in the 20th century. It also includes numerous coherent derived units for common quantities like power (watt) and irradience (lumen). Electrical units were taken from the International system then in use. Other units like those for energy (joule) were modelled on those from the older CGS system, but scaled to be coherent with MKSA units. Two additional base units – the kelvin, which is equivalent to degree Celsius for change in thermodynamic temperature but set so that 0 K is absolute zero, and the candela, which is roughly equivalent to the international candle unit of illumination – were introduced. Later, another base unit, the mole, a unit of amount of substance equivalent to the Avogadro number number of specified molecules, was added along with several other derived units.

The system was promulgated by the General Conference on Weights and Measures (French: Conférence générale des poids et mesures – CGPM) in 1960. At that time, the metre was redefined in terms of the wavelength of a spectral line of the krypton-86[Note 7] atom, and the standard metre artefact from 1889 was retired.

Today, the International system of units consists of 7 base units and innumerable coherent derived units including 22 with special names. The last new derived unit, the katal for catalytic activity, was added in 1999. All the base units except the second are now defined in terms of exact and invariant constants of physics or mathematics, barring those parts of their definitions which are dependent on the second itself. As a consequence, the speed of light has now become an exactly defined constant, and defines the metre as 1299,792,458 of the distance light travels in a second. The kilogram was defined by a cylinder of platinum-iridium alloy until a new definition in terms of natural physical constants was adopted in 2019. As of 2022, the range of decimal prefixes has been extended to those for 1030 (quetta–) and 10−30 (quecto–).[21]

The International System of Units has been adopted as the official system of weights and measures by all nations in the world except for Myanmar, Liberia, and the United States. In the United States, the Metric Conversion Act of 1975 declared the metric system to be the "preferred system of weights and measures" but did not suspend use of customary units, and the United States is the only industrialised country where commercial and standards activities do not predominantly use the metric system.[22]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Example application of divisibility by 5: each numeral on the clock face represents 5 minutes.
  2. ^ Example application of divisibility by 2: half an hour is widely used as a unit of time.
  3. ^ Example application of divisibility by 3: tea/coffee breaks during a conference are often scheduled to be 20 minutes (1/3 of an hour).
  4. ^ Example application of divisibility by 4: a quarter of an hour is widely used as a unit of time.
  5. ^ Example application of divisibility by 6: doctor's appointments are often billed by increments of 10 minutes (1/6 of an hour).
  6. ^ Non-SI units for time and plane angle measurement, inherited from existing systems, are an exception to the decimal-multiplier rule
  7. ^ A stable isotope of an inert gas that occurs in undetectable or trace amounts naturally

References

  1. ^ a b McGreevy, Thomas (1997). Cunningham, Peter (ed.). The Basis of Measurement: Volume 2—Metrication and Current Practice. Chippenham: Picton Publishing. ISBN 978-0-948251-84-9.
  2. ^ "The International System of Units (SI), 9th Edition" (PDF). Bureau International des Poids et Mesures. 2019. (PDF) from the original on 30 May 2019.
  3. ^ a b Alder, Ken (2002). The Measure of all Things—The Seven-Year-Odyssey That Transformed the World. London: Abacus. ISBN 978-0-349-11507-8.
  4. ^ "What is a mise en pratique?". BIPM. 2011. Retrieved 11 March 2011.
  5. ^ . International Organization of Legal Metrology. Archived from the original on 21 May 2013. Retrieved 23 April 2013.
  6. ^ a b c International Bureau of Weights and Measures (2006), The International System of Units (SI) (PDF) (8th ed.), pp. 121, 122, ISBN 92-822-2213-6, (PDF) from the original on 4 June 2021, retrieved 16 December 2021
  7. ^ Brewster, D (1830). The Edinburgh Encyclopædia. p. 494.
  8. ^ Working Group 2 of the Joint Committee for Guides in Metrology (JCGM/WG 2). (2008), International vocabulary of metrology – Basic and general concepts and associated terms (VIM) (PDF) (3rd ed.), International Bureau of Weights and Measures (BIPM) on behalf of the Joint Committee for Guides in Metrology, 1.12, retrieved 12 April 2012
  9. ^ Good, Michael. (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 November 2011. Retrieved 18 March 2011.
  10. ^ a b International Bureau of Weights and Measures (2006), The International System of Units (SI) (PDF) (8th ed.), pp. 111–120, ISBN 92-822-2213-6, (PDF) from the original on 4 June 2021, retrieved 16 December 2021
  11. ^ International Bureau of Weights and Measures (2006), The International System of Units (SI) (PDF) (8th ed.), p. 109, ISBN 92-822-2213-6, (PDF) from the original on 4 June 2021, retrieved 16 December 2021
  12. ^ Thomson, William; Joule, James Prescott; Maxwell, James Clerk; Jenkin, Flemming (1873). "First Report – Cambridge 3 October 1862". In Jenkin, Flemming (ed.). Reports on the Committee on Standards of Electrical Resistance – Appointed by the British Association for the Advancement of Science. London. pp. 1–3. Retrieved 12 May 2011.
  13. ^ "Historical context of the SI—Unit of electric current (ampere)". The NIST Reference on Constants, Units and Uncertainty. Retrieved 10 April 2011.
  14. ^ James Clerk Maxwell (1954) [1891], A Treatise on Electricity & Magnetism, vol. 2 (3rd ed.), Dover Publications
  15. ^ Carron, Neal (2015). "Babel of Units. The Evolution of Units Systems in Classical Electromagnetism". arXiv:1506.01951 [physics.hist-ph].
  16. ^ . International Electrotechnical Commission. 2011. Archived from the original on 15 May 2011. Retrieved 5 April 2011.
  17. ^ "System of Measurement Units". IEEE Global History Network. Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE). Retrieved 21 March 2011.
  18. ^ "Notions de physique – Systèmes d'unités" [Symbols used in physics – units of measure] (in French). Hydrelect.info. Retrieved 21 March 2011.
  19. ^ Michon, Gérard P (9 September 2000). "Final Answers". Numericana.com. Retrieved 11 October 2012.
  20. ^ "Resolution of the 3rd meeting of the CGPM (1901)". General Conference on Weights and Measures. Retrieved 11 October 2012.
  21. ^ "New SI prefixes clear the way for quettabytes of storage". The Register. 22 November 2022. Retrieved 23 November 2022.
  22. ^ "The World Factbook, References - Weights and Measures". Central Intelligence Agency. 2021. Retrieved 11 August 2021.

External links

metric, system, topical, guide, outline, metric, system, metric, system, system, measurement, that, succeeded, decimalised, system, based, metre, that, been, introduced, france, 1790s, historical, development, these, systems, culminated, definition, internatio. For a topical guide see Outline of the metric system The metric system is a system of measurement that succeeded the decimalised system based on the metre that had been introduced in France in the 1790s The historical development of these systems culminated in the definition of the International System of Units SI in the mid 20th century under the oversight of an international standards body Adopting the metric system is known as metrication A kilogram mass and three metric measuring devices a tape measure in centimetres a thermometer in degrees Celsius and a multimeter that measures potential in volts current in amperes and resistance in ohms The historical evolution of metric systems has resulted in the recognition of several principles Each of the fundamental dimensions of nature is expressed by a single base unit of measure The definition of base units has increasingly been realised from natural principles rather than by copies of physical artefacts For quantities derived from the fundamental base units of the system units derived from the base units are used e g the square metre is the derived unit for area a quantity derived from length These derived units are coherent which means that they involve only products of powers of the base units without empirical factors For any given quantity whose unit has a special name and symbol an extended set of smaller and larger units is defined that are related by factors of powers of ten The unit of time should be the second the unit of length should be either the metre or a decimal multiple of it and the unit of mass should be the gram or a decimal multiple of it Metric systems have evolved since the 1790s as science and technology have evolved in providing a single universal measuring system Before and in addition to the SI some other examples of metric systems are the following the MKS system of units and the MKSA systems which are the direct forerunners of the SI the centimetre gram second CGS system and its subtypes the CGS electrostatic cgs esu system the CGS electromagnetic cgs emu system and their still popular blend the Gaussian system the metre tonne second MTS system and the gravitational metric systems which can be based on either the metre or the centimetre and either the gram force or the kilogram force The SI has been adopted as the official system of weights and measures by nearly all nations in the world Contents 1 Background 2 Principles 2 1 Realisation 2 2 Base and derived unit structure 2 3 Decimal ratios 2 4 Prefixes for multiples and submultiples 2 5 Coherence 2 6 Rationalisation 3 Common metric systems 3 1 Gaussian second and the first mechanical system of units 3 2 Centimetre gram second systems 3 3 The EMU ESU and Gaussian systems of electrical units 3 4 International System of Electrical and Magnetic Units 3 5 Other early electromagnetic systems of units 3 6 MKS and MKSA systems 3 7 Metre tonne second systems 3 8 Gravitational systems 3 9 International System of Units 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksBackground EditMain articles History of the metric system and Metrication Pavillon de Breteuil Saint Cloud France the home of the metric system since 1875 The French Revolution 1789 99 provided an opportunity for the French to reform their unwieldy and archaic system of many local weights and measures Charles Maurice de Talleyrand championed a new system based on natural units proposing to the French National Assembly in 1790 that such a system be developed Talleyrand had ambitions that a new natural and standardised system would be embraced worldwide and was keen to involve other countries in its development Great Britain ignored invitations to co operate so the French Academy of Sciences decided in 1791 to go it alone and they set up a commission for the purpose The commission decided that the standard of length should be based on the size of the Earth They defined that length to be the metre and its length as one ten millionth of the length of an Earth quadrant the length of the meridian arc on the Earth s surface from the equator to the north pole In 1799 after the arc measurement had been surveyed the new system was launched in France 1 145 149 The units of the metric system originally taken from observable features of nature are now defined by seven physical constants being given exact numerical values in terms of the units In the modern form of the International System of Units SI the seven base units are metre for length kilogram for mass second for time ampere for electric current kelvin for temperature candela for luminous intensity and mole for amount of substance These together with their derived units can measure any physical quantity Derived units may have their own unit name such as the watt J s and lux cd m2 or may just be expressed as combinations of base units such as velocity m s and acceleration m s2 2 The metric system was designed to have properties that make it easy to use and widely applicable including units based on the natural world decimal ratios prefixes for multiples and sub multiples and a structure of base and derived units It is also a coherent system which means that its units do not introduce conversion factors not already present in equations relating quantities It has a property called rationalisation that eliminates certain constants of proportionality in equations of physics The metric system is extensible and new derived units are defined as needed in fields such as radiology and chemistry For example the katal a derived unit for catalytic activity equivalent to one mole per second 1 mol s was added in 1999 Principles EditAlthough the metric system has changed and developed since its inception its basic concepts have hardly changed Designed for transnational use it consisted of a basic set of units of measurement now known as base units Derived units were built up from the base units using logical rather than empirical relationships while multiples and submultiples of both base and derived units were decimal based and identified by a standard set of prefixes Realisation Edit See also Realisation metrology The metre was originally defined to be one ten millionth of the distance between the North Pole and the Equator through Paris 3 The base units used in a measurement system must be realisable Each of the definitions of the base units in the SI is accompanied by a defined mise en pratique practical realisation that describes in detail at least one way in which the base unit can be measured 4 Where possible definitions of the base units were developed so that any laboratory equipped with proper instruments would be able to realise a standard without reliance on an artefact held by another country In practice such realisation is done under the auspices of a mutual acceptance arrangement 5 In the SI the standard metre is defined as exactly 1 299792 458 of the distance that light travels in a second The realisation of the metre depends in turn on precise realisation of the second There are both astronomical observation methods and laboratory measurement methods that are used to realise units of the standard metre Because the speed of light is now exactly defined in terms of the metre more precise measurement of the speed of light does not result in a more accurate figure for its velocity in standard units but rather a more accurate definition of the metre The accuracy of the measured speed of light is considered to be within 1 m s and the realisation of the metre is within about 3 parts in 1000 000 000 or a relative accuracy of 3 10 9 The kilogram was originally defined as the mass of one cubic decimetre of water at 4 C standardized as the mass of a man made artefact of platinum iridium held in a laboratory in France which was used until a new definition was introduced in May 2019 Replicas made in 1879 at the time of the artefact s fabrication and distributed to signatories of the Metre Convention serve as de facto standards of mass in those countries Additional replicas have been fabricated since as additional countries have joined the convention The replicas were subject to periodic validation by comparison to the original called the IPK It became apparent that either the IPK or the replicas or both were deteriorating and are no longer comparable they had diverged by 50 mg since fabrication so figuratively the accuracy of the kilogram was no better than 5 parts in a hundred million or a relative accuracy of 5 10 8 The accepted redefinition of SI base units replaced the IPK with an exact definition of the Planck constant as expressed in SI units which defines the kilogram in terms of fundamental constants Base and derived unit structure Edit Main article Base unit measurement See also SI derived unit The metric system base units were originally adopted because they represented fundamental orthogonal dimensions of measurement corresponding to how we perceive nature a spatial dimension a time dimension one for inertia and later a more subtle one for the dimension of an invisible substance known as electricity or more generally electromagnetism One and only one unit in each of these dimensions was defined unlike older systems where multiple perceptual quantities with the same dimension were prevalent like inches feet and yards or ounces pounds and tons Units for other quantities like area and volume which are also spatial dimensional quantities were derived from the fundamental ones by logical relationships so that a unit of square area for example was the unit of length squared Many derived units were already in use before and during the time the metric system evolved because they represented convenient abstractions of whatever base units were defined for the system especially in the sciences So analogous units were scaled in terms of the units of the newly established metric system and their names adopted into the system Many of these were associated with electromagnetism Other perceptual units like volume which were not defined in terms of base units were incorporated into the system with definitions in the metric base units so that the system remained simple It grew in number of units but the system retained a uniform structure Decimal ratios Edit Some customary systems of weights and measures have duodecimal base 12 ratios which means quantities are divisible by 2 3 4 and 6 The temporal system of hour minute second has sexagesimal base 60 ratios which is divisible by an extra integer of 5 Note 1 in addition to the divisors of 2 Note 2 3 Note 3 4 Note 4 and 6 Note 5 of the duodecimal ratios which is actually also the half day hour ratio However these systems of measures rarely stick to one constant ratio As mentioned above the ratio of a day to an hour is 24 unequal to the hour to minute or the minute to second ratio of 60 Similarly the foot to inch ratio is 12 which is fourfold of the yard to foot ratio A stone is 14 pounds but a pound is 16 ounces There is no system of notation for successive fractions in these units for example 1 14 of 1 14 of a stone is not an ounce or a multiple of any unit Even though any system of counting in a constant ratio has the algebraic property of multiplicative closure a fraction of a fraction or a multiple of a fraction is a quantity in the system the decimal ratios as the predominant counting ratios in most human societies Naturally a decimal radix became the ratio between unit sizes of the metric system In the decimal system 1 10 of 1 10 is 1 100 which is also within the same decimal system Prefixes for multiples and submultiples Edit Main article Metric prefix In the metric system multiples and submultiples of units follow a decimal pattern Note 6 Metric prefixes in everyday usevte Prefix Symbol Factor Powertera T 1000 000 000 000 1012giga G 1000 000 000 109mega M 1000 000 106kilo k 1000 103hecto h 100 102deca da 10 101 none none 1 100deci d 0 1 10 1centi c 0 01 10 2milli m 0 001 10 3micro m 0 000001 10 6nano n 0 000000 001 10 9pico p 0 000000 000 001 10 12A common set of decimal based prefixes that have the effect of multiplication or division by an integer power of ten can be applied to units that are themselves too large or too small for practical use The concept of using consistent classical Latin or Greek names for the prefixes was first proposed in a report by the French Revolutionary Commission on Weights and Measures in May 1793 3 89 96 The prefix kilo for example is used to multiply the unit by 1000 and the prefix milli is to indicate a one thousandth part of the unit Thus the kilogram and kilometre are a thousand grams and metres respectively and a milligram and millimetre are one thousandth of a gram and metre respectively These relations can be written symbolically as 6 1 mg 0 001 g 1 km 1000 m In the early days multipliers that were positive powers of ten were given Greek derived prefixes such as kilo and mega and those that were negative powers of ten were given Latin derived prefixes such as centi and milli However 1935 extensions to the prefix system did not follow this convention the prefixes nano and micro for example have Greek roots 1 222 223 During the 19th century the prefix myria derived from the Greek word myrioi myrioi was used as a multiplier for 10000 7 When applying prefixes to derived units of area and volume that are expressed in terms of units of length squared or cubed the square and cube operators are applied to the unit of length including the prefix as illustrated below 6 1 mm2 square millimetre 1 mm 2 0 001 m 2 0 000001 m21 km2 square kilometre 1 km 2 1000 m 2 1000 000 m21 mm3 cubic millimetre 1 mm 3 0 001 m 3 0 000000 001 m31 km3 cubic kilometre 1 km 3 1000 m 3 1000 000 000 m3Prefixes are not usually used to indicate multiples of a second greater than 1 the non SI units of minute hour and day are used instead On the other hand prefixes are used for multiples of the non SI unit of volume the litre l L such as millilitres ml 6 Coherence Edit Main article Coherence units of measurement James Clerk Maxwell played a major role in developing the concept of a coherent CGS system and in extending the metric system to include electrical units Each variant of the metric system has a degree of coherence the derived units are directly related to the base units without the need for intermediate conversion factors 8 For example in a coherent system the units of force energy and power are chosen so that the equations force mass accelerationenergy force distanceenergy power timehold without the introduction of unit conversion factors Once a set of coherent units have been defined other relationships in physics that use those units will automatically be true Therefore Einstein s mass energy equation E mc2 does not require extraneous constants when expressed in coherent units 9 The CGS system had two units of energy the erg that was related to mechanics and the calorie that was related to thermal energy so only one of them the erg could bear a coherent relationship to the base units Coherence was a design aim of SI which resulted in only one unit of energy being defined the joule 10 Rationalisation Edit Maxwell s equations of electromagnetism contained a factor relating to steradians representative of the fact that electric charges and magnetic fields may be considered to emanate from a point and propagate equally in all directions i e spherically This factor appeared awkwardly in many equations of physics dealing with the dimensionality of electromagnetism and sometimes other things Common metric systems EditA number of different metric system have been developed all using the Metre des Archives and Kilogramme des Archives or their descendants as their base units but differing in the definitions of the various derived units Variants of the metric system Quantity SI MKS CGS MTSdistance displacement length height etc d x l h etc metre m centimetre cm metremass m kilogram kg gram g tonne t time t second s second secondspeed velocity v v m s cm s m sacceleration a m s2 gal Gal m s2force F newton N dyne dyn sthene sn pressure P or p pascal Pa barye Ba pieze pz energy E Q W joule J erg erg kilojoule kJ power P watt W erg s kilowatt kW viscosity m Pa s poise P pz sGaussian second and the first mechanical system of units Edit Main article Gaussian units In 1832 Gauss used the astronomical second as a base unit in defining the gravitation of the earth and together with the gram and millimetre became the first system of mechanical units Centimetre gram second systems Edit Main article centimetre gram second system of units The centimetre gram second system of units CGS was the first coherent metric system having been developed in the 1860s and promoted by Maxwell and Thomson In 1874 this system was formally promoted by the British Association for the Advancement of Science BAAS 11 The system s characteristics are that density is expressed in g cm3 force expressed in dynes and mechanical energy in ergs Thermal energy was defined in calories one calorie being the energy required to raise the temperature of one gram of water from 15 5 C to 16 5 C The meeting also recognised two sets of units for electrical and magnetic properties the electrostatic set of units and the electromagnetic set of units 12 The EMU ESU and Gaussian systems of electrical units Edit Several systems of electrical units were defined following discovery of Ohm s law in 1824 International System of Electrical and Magnetic Units Edit Main article International System of Electrical and Magnetic Units The CGS units of electricity were cumbersome to work with This was remedied at the 1893 International Electrical Congress held in Chicago by defining the international ampere and ohm using definitions based on the metre kilogram and second 13 Other early electromagnetic systems of units Edit Further information History of the metric system QES During the same period in which the CGS system was being extended to include electromagnetism other systems were developed distinguished by their choice of coherent base unit including the Practical System of Electric Units or QES quad eleventhgram second system was being used 14 268 15 17 Here the base units are the quad equal to 107 m approximately a quadrant of the earth s circumference the eleventhgram equal to 10 11 g and the second These were chosen so that the corresponding electrical units of potential difference current and resistance had a convenient magnitude MKS and MKSA systems Edit In 1901 Giovanni Giorgi showed that by adding an electrical unit as a fourth base unit the various anomalies in electromagnetic systems could be resolved The metre kilogram second coulomb MKSC and metre kilogram second ampere MKSA systems are examples of such systems 16 The International System of Units Systeme international d unites or SI is the current international standard metric system and is also the system most widely used around the world It is an extension of Giorgi s MKSA system its base units are the metre kilogram second ampere kelvin candela and mole 10 The MKS metre kilogram second system came into existence in 1889 when artefacts for the metre and kilogram were fabricated according to the Metre Convention Early in the 20th century an unspecified electrical unit was added and the system was called MKSX When it became apparent that the unit would be the ampere the system was referred to as the MKSA system and was the direct predecessor of the SI Metre tonne second systems Edit Main article metre tonne second system of units The metre tonne second system of units MTS was based on the metre tonne and second the unit of force was the sthene and the unit of pressure was the pieze It was invented in France for industrial use and from 1933 to 1955 was used both in France and in the Soviet Union 17 18 Gravitational systems Edit Main article Gravitational metric system Gravitational metric systems use the kilogram force kilopond as a base unit of force with mass measured in a unit known as the hyl Technische Masseneinheit TME mug or metric slug 19 Although the CGPM passed a resolution in 1901 defining the standard value of acceleration due to gravity to be 980 665 cm s2 gravitational units are not part of the International System of Units SI 20 International System of Units Edit Main articles International System of Units and List of physical quantitiesThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message The International System of Units is the modern metric system It is based on the metre kilogram second ampere MKSA system of units from early in the 20th century It also includes numerous coherent derived units for common quantities like power watt and irradience lumen Electrical units were taken from the International system then in use Other units like those for energy joule were modelled on those from the older CGS system but scaled to be coherent with MKSA units Two additional base units the kelvin which is equivalent to degree Celsius for change in thermodynamic temperature but set so that 0 K is absolute zero and the candela which is roughly equivalent to the international candle unit of illumination were introduced Later another base unit the mole a unit of amount of substance equivalent to the Avogadro number number of specified molecules was added along with several other derived units The system was promulgated by the General Conference on Weights and Measures French Conference generale des poids et mesures CGPM in 1960 At that time the metre was redefined in terms of the wavelength of a spectral line of the krypton 86 Note 7 atom and the standard metre artefact from 1889 was retired Today the International system of units consists of 7 base units and innumerable coherent derived units including 22 with special names The last new derived unit the katal for catalytic activity was added in 1999 All the base units except the second are now defined in terms of exact and invariant constants of physics or mathematics barring those parts of their definitions which are dependent on the second itself As a consequence the speed of light has now become an exactly defined constant and defines the metre as 1 299 792 458 of the distance light travels in a second The kilogram was defined by a cylinder of platinum iridium alloy until a new definition in terms of natural physical constants was adopted in 2019 As of 2022 the range of decimal prefixes has been extended to those for 1030 quetta and 10 30 quecto 21 The International System of Units has been adopted as the official system of weights and measures by all nations in the world except for Myanmar Liberia and the United States In the United States the Metric Conversion Act of 1975 declared the metric system to be the preferred system of weights and measures but did not suspend use of customary units and the United States is the only industrialised country where commercial and standards activities do not predominantly use the metric system 22 See also EditBinary prefix used in computer science Electrostatic units History of measurement ISO IEC 80000 international standard of quantities and their units superseding ISO 31 List of metric units Metrology Unified Code for Units of Measure International System of UnitsNotes Edit Example application of divisibility by 5 each numeral on the clock face represents 5 minutes Example application of divisibility by 2 half an hour is widely used as a unit of time Example application of divisibility by 3 tea coffee breaks during a conference are often scheduled to be 20 minutes 1 3 of an hour Example application of divisibility by 4 a quarter of an hour is widely used as a unit of time Example application of divisibility by 6 doctor s appointments are often billed by increments of 10 minutes 1 6 of an hour Non SI units for time and plane angle measurement inherited from existing systems are an exception to the decimal multiplier rule A stable isotope of an inert gas that occurs in undetectable or trace amounts naturallyReferences Edit a b McGreevy Thomas 1997 Cunningham Peter ed The Basis of Measurement Volume 2 Metrication and Current Practice Chippenham Picton Publishing ISBN 978 0 948251 84 9 The International System of Units SI 9th Edition PDF Bureau International des Poids et Mesures 2019 Archived PDF from the original on 30 May 2019 a b Alder Ken 2002 The Measure of all Things The Seven Year Odyssey That Transformed the World London Abacus ISBN 978 0 349 11507 8 What is a mise en pratique BIPM 2011 Retrieved 11 March 2011 OIML Mutual Acceptance Arrangement MAA International Organization of Legal Metrology Archived from the original on 21 May 2013 Retrieved 23 April 2013 a b c International Bureau of Weights and Measures 2006 The International System of Units SI PDF 8th ed pp 121 122 ISBN 92 822 2213 6 archived PDF from the original on 4 June 2021 retrieved 16 December 2021 Brewster D 1830 The Edinburgh Encyclopaedia p 494 Working Group 2 of the Joint Committee for Guides in Metrology JCGM WG 2 2008 International vocabulary of metrology Basic and general concepts and associated terms VIM PDF 3rd ed International Bureau of Weights and Measures BIPM on behalf of the Joint Committee for Guides in Metrology 1 12 retrieved 12 April 2012 Good Michael Some Derivations of E mc2 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 7 November 2011 Retrieved 18 March 2011 a b International Bureau of Weights and Measures 2006 The International System of Units SI PDF 8th ed pp 111 120 ISBN 92 822 2213 6 archived PDF from the original on 4 June 2021 retrieved 16 December 2021 International Bureau of Weights and Measures 2006 The International System of Units SI PDF 8th ed p 109 ISBN 92 822 2213 6 archived PDF from the original on 4 June 2021 retrieved 16 December 2021 Thomson William Joule James Prescott Maxwell James Clerk Jenkin Flemming 1873 First Report Cambridge 3 October 1862 In Jenkin Flemming ed Reports on the Committee on Standards of Electrical Resistance Appointed by the British Association for the Advancement of Science London pp 1 3 Retrieved 12 May 2011 Historical context of the SI Unit of electric current ampere The NIST Reference on Constants Units and Uncertainty Retrieved 10 April 2011 James Clerk Maxwell 1954 1891 A Treatise on Electricity amp Magnetism vol 2 3rd ed Dover Publications Carron Neal 2015 Babel of Units The Evolution of Units Systems in Classical Electromagnetism arXiv 1506 01951 physics hist ph In the beginning Giovanni Giorgi International Electrotechnical Commission 2011 Archived from the original on 15 May 2011 Retrieved 5 April 2011 System of Measurement Units IEEE Global History Network Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers IEEE Retrieved 21 March 2011 Notions de physique Systemes d unites Symbols used in physics units of measure in French Hydrelect info Retrieved 21 March 2011 Michon Gerard P 9 September 2000 Final Answers Numericana com Retrieved 11 October 2012 Resolution of the 3rd meeting of the CGPM 1901 General Conference on Weights and Measures Retrieved 11 October 2012 New SI prefixes clear the way for quettabytes of storage The Register 22 November 2022 Retrieved 23 November 2022 The World Factbook References Weights and Measures Central Intelligence Agency 2021 Retrieved 11 August 2021 External links Edit Wikiversity has learning resources about Using the Metric System Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Metric system amp oldid 1129388690, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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