Measurements
Posted: Thu Jan 05, 2006 3:36 am
We all know the importance of accurate measurement but how many of us ever think how our systems came about?
Here's two ends of a part of the story.
"It is ordained that three grains of barley, dry and round, make an inch..."
The Statute for Measuring Land. 33Edw.1, Statute 6 (AD 1305).
"The metre shall be equal to 1,650,763.73 times the vacuum wave-length of the orange line of the Krypton 86 atom, the radiation being ideally specified by the unperturbed transition between the levels identified by the spectral terms
2P10 and 5d5".
11th General Conference of Weights and Measures (1960)
That's the best that I could do on this computer with the maths symbols.
Now haven't you always wanted to know how accuraccy is achieved?
Eoin.
Here's two ends of a part of the story.
"It is ordained that three grains of barley, dry and round, make an inch..."
The Statute for Measuring Land. 33Edw.1, Statute 6 (AD 1305).
"The metre shall be equal to 1,650,763.73 times the vacuum wave-length of the orange line of the Krypton 86 atom, the radiation being ideally specified by the unperturbed transition between the levels identified by the spectral terms
2P10 and 5d5".
11th General Conference of Weights and Measures (1960)
That's the best that I could do on this computer with the maths symbols.
Now haven't you always wanted to know how accuraccy is achieved?
Eoin.