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- From: drw@euclid.mit.edu (Dale R. Worley)
- Newsgroups: alt.cesium
- Subject: Re: Time and our heroic element
- Message-ID: <DRW.92Sep10151422@euclid.mit.edu>
- Date: 10 Sep 92 20:14:22 GMT
- References: <mDr-L=+@engin.umich.edu> <1992Sep10.125343.12926@athena.mit.edu>
- <BuD831.DKB@news.larc.nasa.gov> <18nojhINNcm0@agate.berkeley.edu>
- Sender: news@athena.mit.edu (News system)
- Organization: MIT Dept. of Tetrapilotomy, Cambridge, MA, USA
- Lines: 25
- In-Reply-To: gezelter@sam.cchem.berkeley.edu's message of 10 Sep 1992 15:11:45 GMT
- Nntp-Posting-Host: euclid.mit.edu
-
- In article <18nojhINNcm0@agate.berkeley.edu> gezelter@sam.cchem.berkeley.edu (Dan Gezelter) writes:
- >|> No, actually the meter is defined by the distance travelled by light in
- >|> 1/299,xxx,xxx of a second.
- >
- >NO, actually the meter is *defined* as a certain number of wavelengths of a
- >particular atomic transition of Krypton 86 ...
-
- Correct. Once again, according to the latest NIST standards card, the
- meter is defined as 1,650,763.73 wavelengths in vaccuum corresponding
- to the transition 2p -> 5d of krypton 86.
- 10 5
-
- Kids: The definition of the meter used to be based on krypton 86. But
- the trouble was that the technology got to where people could measure
- the speed of light more accuractely than they could measure distances
- from the krypton standard. So the international standard was changed
- to fix the speed of light. Perhaps NIST still uses the krypton
- standard, but the international (BIPM) standard is based on the
- fixing of the speed of light.
-
- Dale
-
- Dale Worley Dept. of Math., MIT drw@math.mit.edu
- --
- The universe owes you nothing; not even survival. *Especially* not survival.
-