BBC Science Focus

THE WEIGHT IS OVER: THE KILOGRAM HAS A NEW DEFINITION

The kilogram, along with several other standard units, is being redefined by the Internatio­nal Bureau of Weights and Measures

- Kelly Oakes is a freelance science journalist with a degree in physics.

How much does a kilogram weigh? It’s a simple question with a complicate­d answer – and next May, that answer is changing for the first time in over a century.

As it stands, a kilogram is defined by a lump of metal kept in a safe in Paris. Officially called the Internatio­nal Prototype of the Kilogram (IPK), but more affectiona­tely referred to as Le Grand K, it’s a cylinder made from a platinum-iridium alloy that has defined the kilogram since 1889, when it was officially sanctioned and put into storage at the Internatio­nal Bureau of Weights and Measures (BIPM) in France. There are also several copies of it around the world – the UK’s specimen is held by the National Physical Laboratory (NPL) in Teddington.

Before the metric system was created, weights and measures varied from nation to nation, and even within countries. But after the French Revolution, the movement to create a universal standard started gathering pace. Eventually the first physical standards were created, Le Grand K among them. Over time, scientists have replaced these standards with more robust definition­s – with the kilogram the last to go.

For decades, metrologis­ts (scientists who specialise in measures) have known that Le Grand K’s weight changes due to atmospheri­c conditions. Being a physical object means the IPK is subject to its environmen­t: pollution in the air can bind to the metal, adding weight, while wear caused by handling can decrease its mass. Every 40 years, the IRK and its copies are compared. Those measuremen­ts show the weight of the copies increasing by tens of micrograms, relative to the original which remains, by definition, 1kg.

In November, scientists voted to scrap the existing definition of a kilogram in favour of a new one based instead on a fundamenta­l constant of nature known

as the Planck constant. The new definition applies from 20 May 2019.

“Scientists, and more specifical­ly metrologis­ts, should be pleased they now have a perfectly stable definition for the SI unit of mass,” says Dr Stuart Davidson, head of mass metrology at NPL. “This will impact pharmaceut­ical research and production, microfabri­cation and robotics, and in the longer term it could be used in areas such as personalis­ed medicine.”

The new definition will work using a Kibble balance, which uses a currentcar­rying wire in a magnetic field to balance the mechanical energy exerted by an object with mass. Scientists can then calculate the weight of the object by moving the coil and measuring the speed with a laser, and using universal constants such as the speed of light and Planck’s constant.

It’s not just the kilogram that’s getting a new definition. Our measures of temperatur­e (Kelvin), electric current (ampere) and amount of substance (mole) are all getting new definition­s, also based on fundamenta­l constants. The other three base units defined by the Internatio­nal System of Units – our measures of time (second), length (metre), and luminosity (candela) – are already based on fundamenta­l physical constants, so will not change.

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 ??  ?? The new kilo is defined using a Kibble balance – a high-tech electronic weighing scale
The new kilo is defined using a Kibble balance – a high-tech electronic weighing scale
 ??  ?? A standard half-kilogram at the US’s National Institute of Standards and Technology
A standard half-kilogram at the US’s National Institute of Standards and Technology

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