Kilogram Konundrum
And some people think that moral standards are slipping. One more sign that things ain't what they seem to be.
BRAUNSCHWEIG, Germany: In these girth-conscious times, even weight itself has weight issues. The kilogram is getting lighter, scientists say, sowing potential confusion over a range of scientific endeavour.
The kilogram is defined by a platinum-iridium cylinder, cast in England in 1889. No one knows why it is shedding weight, at least in comparison with other reference weights, but the change has spurred search for a more stable definition.
?It?s certainly not helpful to have a standard that keeps changing,? says Peter Becker, a scientist at the Federal Standards Laboratory here, an institution of 1,500 scientists dedicated entirely to improving the ability to measure things precisely.
Read the whole thing.
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adamantium is canadian.
Canadian is the same as American, it just won't be official until Sept 14, 2019.
you don't know what you're talking about. adamantium clad mounties are infiltrating the hallowed halls and highest echelons of american power as we speak.
Adamantium is Canadian? That's not how I heard it:
From http://www.marveldirectory.com/misc/adamantium.htm
"Adamantium is ... created through a secret process discovered by the American metallurgist Dr. Myron MacLain.
"MacLain began experimenting with the process that created Adamantium as a young scientist in the employ of the United States government in the early 1940s. ...
"The United States government has shared the secret of Adamantium's composition with certain of its allies, and the secret has also fallen into the hands of various criminals..."
The above confirms my fading memories of happy times spent reading Marvel and DC books in youth.
Does anyone know why the original kg reference metal was chosen, anyway?
50 mikes is a lot of weight... I wonder if it represents hitch-hiking molecules shed from the surface (because someone changed the room's lighting?), or some sort of gaseous impurity drying out, or perhaps unstable isotopes committing suicide?
A few years ago a team in the US got bogus iridium data from soil samples due to a researcher's platinum engagement ring. It led to a paper being withdrawn. Related phenomena? I wonder if water or some aqueous acid can hijack iridium from the surface?
I know! "It's elementary, Watson."
this wouldn't happen if we had private metrics.
Maybe it was shamed into losing weight by the health nazis.
It reads like a preamble to a sick joke: How many German scientists does it take to ensure conformity?
Sounds like a consequence of rampant relativism on the Continent.
Lousy no-good metric system.
Chances are, it's gonna gain that weight right back.
If a word were misspelled in the dictionary, how would you know?
If the a standard of measurement is off, how would you know?
By what standard do we measure THE Standard?
(Which reminds me . . . Who regulates the regulators?)
The hell with that damned EU iridium! Good ol' US Adamantium is the stuff you want. Ask any comic-book reader.
"My car gets 40 rods to the hogshead, and that's the way I likes it!" -- Abe Simpson
Probably because the metals used are oxidation resistant. Otherwise the Kg would gain weight over time.
James:
The platinum-iridium alloy was chosen for its resistance to oxidation. Most metals will undergo a certain amount of surface oxidation over time, which would lead to an increase in weight.
And I thought it was bad when I found out the North Pole was moving!
EMAIL: master-x@canada.com
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DATE: 02/27/2004 04:03:55
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