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The Metric System Simple & Consistent

The Metric System Simple & Consistent Measurement up to 1790: Not a pretty picture! standardMeasurement requires a standard and until about the 1790’s

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Page 1: The Metric System Simple & Consistent Measurement up to 1790: Not a pretty picture! standardMeasurement requires a standard and until about the 1790’s

The Metric System

Simple & Consistent

Page 2: The Metric System Simple & Consistent Measurement up to 1790: Not a pretty picture! standardMeasurement requires a standard and until about the 1790’s

Measurement up to 1790:Not a pretty picture!

•Measurement requires a standardstandard

and until about the 1790’s every

region had it’s own standard

Page 3: The Metric System Simple & Consistent Measurement up to 1790: Not a pretty picture! standardMeasurement requires a standard and until about the 1790’s

Standards• “A standard is something that is

used as a comparison for measuring”

– The standard must be available for available for everyoneeveryone to use to check measurements

– means a standard should be a standard should be something in nature that is the same something in nature that is the same all over the earthall over the earth

– The standard must never varynever vary

Page 4: The Metric System Simple & Consistent Measurement up to 1790: Not a pretty picture! standardMeasurement requires a standard and until about the 1790’s

1585 – Simon Stevin• Introduced the use of decimals in

mathematics in Europe

•Predicted the universal introduction of decimal coinage, measures and weights

Page 5: The Metric System Simple & Consistent Measurement up to 1790: Not a pretty picture! standardMeasurement requires a standard and until about the 1790’s

1670 – Gabriel Mouton

•1st to propose the decimal system of measurement based based on the size of the earthon the size of the earth

•Earth-based standard: 1 of longitude

The earth is a standard available to The earth is a standard available to everyone! What an idea!everyone! What an idea!

Page 6: The Metric System Simple & Consistent Measurement up to 1790: Not a pretty picture! standardMeasurement requires a standard and until about the 1790’s

Systeme International (SI)

•Based on the metric system, invented in 1790*– Originally, earth-based standards– Volume & mass linked to length– Larger & smaller multiples of each

unit related by powers of 10

*updated in 1960

Page 7: The Metric System Simple & Consistent Measurement up to 1790: Not a pretty picture! standardMeasurement requires a standard and until about the 1790’s

1790 – French Academy of Sciences createdcreated the metric

system

3 Requirements

Page 8: The Metric System Simple & Consistent Measurement up to 1790: Not a pretty picture! standardMeasurement requires a standard and until about the 1790’s

Basic Standard = Earth

1. The unit of length was to be a portion of the Earth's circumference

Page 9: The Metric System Simple & Consistent Measurement up to 1790: Not a pretty picture! standardMeasurement requires a standard and until about the 1790’s

Internal Consistency

2. Units for capacity (volume or space) and mass relatedrelated to the unit of length

Page 10: The Metric System Simple & Consistent Measurement up to 1790: Not a pretty picture! standardMeasurement requires a standard and until about the 1790’s

Ease of Use - Calculations

3. Larger and smaller units are created by multiplying or multiplying or dividing the basic units by dividing the basic units by factors of 10factors of 10

Page 11: The Metric System Simple & Consistent Measurement up to 1790: Not a pretty picture! standardMeasurement requires a standard and until about the 1790’s

Fundamental or Base Units

•Based on object or event in nature

•The SI system has 77 fundamental units

•You already know 4. What are they?

Page 12: The Metric System Simple & Consistent Measurement up to 1790: Not a pretty picture! standardMeasurement requires a standard and until about the 1790’s

AbbreviationNameQuantity

mmeterLength

kgkilogramMass

KkelvinTemperature

ssecondTime

cdcdcandelacandelaLuminous Luminous IntensityIntensity

AAampereampereElectric CurrentElectric Current

molmolMoleMoleAmount of Amount of SubstanceSubstance

7 Fundamental Quantities of SI7 Fundamental Quantities of SI

Page 13: The Metric System Simple & Consistent Measurement up to 1790: Not a pretty picture! standardMeasurement requires a standard and until about the 1790’s

Derived Units

• Combinations of fundamental units• Many, many derived units

• Examples:– Speed or meters/second– Area or Length X Width– Volume or Length X Width X Height– Density or Mass / Volume

Page 14: The Metric System Simple & Consistent Measurement up to 1790: Not a pretty picture! standardMeasurement requires a standard and until about the 1790’s

Ease of Use - Names

Larger & smaller multiples of each unit named by a series of prefixesprefixes relating them to the base unit

Page 15: The Metric System Simple & Consistent Measurement up to 1790: Not a pretty picture! standardMeasurement requires a standard and until about the 1790’s

Smaller & Larger Units•1/10 of a meter = decimeter (dm)•1/100 of a meter = centimeter (cm)•1/1000 of a meter = millimeter

(mm)

•10 meters = dekameter (dam)•100 meters = hectometer (hm)•1000 meters = kilometer (km)

Page 16: The Metric System Simple & Consistent Measurement up to 1790: Not a pretty picture! standardMeasurement requires a standard and until about the 1790’s

UsePowerValueSymbolPrefix

Gigabyte1091,000,000,000GGiga

Megamillion1061,000,000MMega

kilometerkilometer1010331,0001,000kkKiloKilo

decimeter10-10.1ddeci

centimetercentimeter1010-2-20.010.01cccenticenti

millimetermillimeter1010-3-30.0010.001mmmillimilli

micrometer10-60.000001micro

nanometer10-90.000000001nnano

Prefixes in the SI SystemPrefixes in the SI System

Page 17: The Metric System Simple & Consistent Measurement up to 1790: Not a pretty picture! standardMeasurement requires a standard and until about the 1790’s

Prefixes

•The prefixes can be used with all 7 fundamental units!–Kilometermeter–Milliliterliter–Centigramgram–Microsecondsecond–Nanokelvinkelvin

Page 18: The Metric System Simple & Consistent Measurement up to 1790: Not a pretty picture! standardMeasurement requires a standard and until about the 1790’s

1790 - Jefferson

•Proposed a decimal-based measurement system for the United States

•Didn’t come up with the prefix idea and his system had too many names

Page 19: The Metric System Simple & Consistent Measurement up to 1790: Not a pretty picture! standardMeasurement requires a standard and until about the 1790’s

1792 – U.S. Mint

•Produced world’s first decimal currency (one dollar = 100 cents)

Page 20: The Metric System Simple & Consistent Measurement up to 1790: Not a pretty picture! standardMeasurement requires a standard and until about the 1790’s

What is a meter?

1790: 1/10,000,000 th of the distance from the North pole to the equator

1983: the distance light travels in a vacuum in 1//299,792,458 th of a second

Page 21: The Metric System Simple & Consistent Measurement up to 1790: Not a pretty picture! standardMeasurement requires a standard and until about the 1790’s
Page 22: The Metric System Simple & Consistent Measurement up to 1790: Not a pretty picture! standardMeasurement requires a standard and until about the 1790’s

What is a Liter?• Liter defined as cube measuring

10 centimeters on each side, or 1000 cm3

• Liter based on meter, which is based on Earth

10 cm

10 c

m

10 cm

Page 23: The Metric System Simple & Consistent Measurement up to 1790: Not a pretty picture! standardMeasurement requires a standard and until about the 1790’s

What is a kilogram?

10 cm

10 c

m

10 cm

mass 1 Liter water at 4°C

Why water?

kilogram is based on liter, which is based on meter, which is based on Earth

Page 24: The Metric System Simple & Consistent Measurement up to 1790: Not a pretty picture! standardMeasurement requires a standard and until about the 1790’s

What is a second?

second was originally defined as 1/86,400th of average solar day

Now: defined in terms of electron transitions in Cs-133

Page 25: The Metric System Simple & Consistent Measurement up to 1790: Not a pretty picture! standardMeasurement requires a standard and until about the 1790’s

What is a kelvin?

The kelvin is defined in terms of water & absolute zero

0 K = Absolute zero0 K = Absolute zero

bp of Hbp of H22O = 100O = 100C = 373 KC = 373 K

mp of Hmp of H22O = 0O = 0C = 273 KC = 273 K

Page 26: The Metric System Simple & Consistent Measurement up to 1790: Not a pretty picture! standardMeasurement requires a standard and until about the 1790’s

What is a mole?

•amount of substance which has as many elementary particles as there are atoms in 0.012 kilogram of carbon-12

Page 27: The Metric System Simple & Consistent Measurement up to 1790: Not a pretty picture! standardMeasurement requires a standard and until about the 1790’s

Prototype kilogram in France