McGill.CA / Science / Department of Physics

Physical Society Colloquium

Mass Metrology:
its Pitfalls and the Redefinition of the Kilogram

George Chapman

Institute for National Measurement Standards
National Research Council

In the popular mind and, indeed, that of many scientists, the measurement of the mass of an object would seem to be a simple task, particularly with the ready availability of modern comparators operated by microprocessors. However, it is a truism that, with higher resolution and accuracy, effects that were once negligible become important. Electromagnetic and tidal effects are just two of the modern plagues of mass metrology, to be added to the standing list of buoyancy and surface effects that have always made the mass metrologist's life interesting.

Mass is the last of the base units of the Système International to be embodied in a physical artifact a fact that should keep physicists awake at night. It is also the only base unit that is inferred from the measurement of something else. Efforts to redefine the kilogram in terms of atomic or physical constants are ongoing and have evolved into three principle paths based on electromagnetic force, Avogadro's number and the absolute masses of certain isotopes. These will be reviewed and I will once again look into the rather cloudy crystal ball which purports to provide a window into the future of mass, its traceability and its reproducibility. Be warned that, as an optimist, my predictive track record is not a particularly good one.

Friday, November 26th 2004, 13:30
Ernest Rutherford Physics Building, R.E. Bell Conference Room (room 103)