06146nam 22008053 450 991100928540332120250523181839.0978075033142507503314299780750331432075033143710.1088/978-0-7503-3143-2(CKB)5590000000002004(CaBNVSL)thg00981215(OCoLC)1182503054(IOP)9780750331432(MiAaPQ)EBC31253215(Au-PeEL)EBL31253215(OCoLC)1429741668(EXLCZ)99559000000000200420250523d2020 uy 0engurcn||||m|||ardacontentisbdmediardacarrierDefining and measuring nature the make of all things /Jeffrey Huw WilliamsSecond edition.Bristol [England] (Temple Circus, Temple Way, Bristol BS1 6HG, UK) :IOP Publishing,[2020]1 online resource (various pagings) illustrations (some color)IOP ebooks"Version: 20200701"--Title page verso.9780750331449 0750331445 9780750331418 0750331410 Includes bibliographical references.Introduction : the origin of observation and measurement -- 1. Measurement in antiquity -- 1.1. Man is the measure of all things -- 1.2. Seeds and cosmic forces -- 1.3. The Bronze-Age -- 1.4. Ancient time metrology : the calendar -- 1.5. The Roman Empire2. Measurement in the early modern period -- 2.1. 'Measured by the King's iron rod' -- 2.2. Measuring the world -- 2.3. The pendulum : the world's first precision measuring device -- 2.4. 'Dear boy ...'3. Measurement in the modern world (I) -- 3.1. Surveying and measuring the Earth -- 3.2. The circumference of the Earth -- 3.3. The Chinese survey -- 3.4. La Révolution Française -- 3.5. Defining the size of the world -- 3.6. The metric survey -- 3.7. The error in all things4. Measurement in the modern world (II) -- 4.1. Envy, money, terror, and the metric system -- 4.2. The endgame -- 4.3. Avez-vous l'heure s'il vous plait? -- 4.4. Falling out of favour with the metric system5. Creating the language that is science -- 5.1. Dividing apples with oranges to make ... something different -- 5.2. The consequences of mixing units -- 5.3. Derived units -- 5.4. A final comment on the value of a quantity6. What was not in the original metric system? -- 6.1. Energy, work, and power -- 6.2. Electricity -- 6.3. The molecule meme -- 6.4. Unit conversion in electromagnetism7. Measurement in the age of scientific certainty -- 7.1. The Convention du mètre -- 7.2. Conférence générale des poids et mesures (CGPM) -- 7.3. Comité international des poids et mesures (CIPM) -- 7.4. Bureau international des poids et mesures (BIPM)8. A true universal language : the SI -- 8.1. Even scientists cannot always agree on units9. 20th century confusions and refinements in measurement -- 9.1. International politics -- 9.2. Events at the BIPM during the Fall of France, June 1940 -- 9.3. Two peoples separated by a common system of weights and measures10. The birth of the Quantum-SI -- 10.1. The need for change -- 10.2. The problem that was the kilogram -- 10.3. The background to the redefinition11. The base units of the Système International des Unites (I) -- 11.1. The base unit of length is the metre (m) -- 11.2. The base unit of mass is the kilogram (kg) -- 11.3. The base unit of electric current is the ampere (A) -- 11.4. The base unit of thermodynamic temperature is the kelvin (K) -- 11.5. The base unit of light intensity is the candela (cd) -- 11.6. The base unit of amount of substance is the mole (mol)12. The base units of the Système International des Unites (II) -- 12.1. The base unit of time is the second (s) -- 12.2. The future of frequency standards -- 12.3. The mechanism of an optical clock -- 12.4. Secondary representations of the second -- 12.5. Possible applications of optical clocks13. The new Système international des unites -- 13.1. Some further details of the Quantum-SI -- 13.2. Experimental measurements of the elementary charge, e -- 13.3. The problem of the permeability of space in the new SI -- 13.4. Determination of the Planck constant -- 13.5. Measurement of NA by x-ray diffraction14. For this is science -- 14.1. Units of measurement must evolve, because science evolves -- 14.2. The constants of Nature -- 14.3. Final thoughts on the evolution of units of measurement.Measurement forms an essential part of our view of the world. Our world is measured and calibrated, and we are all subject to the tyranny of these numbers. In this updated and extended edition, Jeffrey Huw Williams outlines the history of measurement; particularly of the International System of units (SI). Since the previous edition, the base units of the SI have been redefined; realising a 150-year-old dream for a measurement system based on unchanging, fundamental quantities of nature. This change has created a new SI, a Quantum-SI, which will significantly change the way we look at nature in a quantitative manner, and greatly facilitate the advance of science.IOP ebooks.Make of all things.Weights and measuresHistoryMeasurementHistoryMetric systemHistoryWeights and measuresHistory.MeasurementHistory.Metric systemHistory.530.8/1Williams Jeffrey H(Jeffrey Huw),1956-1837061Institute of Physics (Great Britain),MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9911009285403321Defining and measuring nature4415407UNINA