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Refinements to definitions of the base units of the SI system introduced on 20 May 2019

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As explained in SI unit definitions the kilogram used to be defined by reference to the mass of a specific material artefact, i.e. the international prototype kilogram. The definitions of the ampere, mole and candela then depended on the kilogram. Other base unit definitions that had previously referred to specific material artefacts (e.g. the metre) had been altered so that they refered directly to fundamental constants of nature.

 

The 23rd (2007) and 24th (2011) meetings of the CIPM included resolutions that aimed to redefine the kilogram by reference to a fundamental constant of nature, and to redefine the mole and candela to link more directly to such constants. Definitions were agreed by CIPM (2011) but without some of the precise numerical values being then selected.

 

On 20 May 2019 the following exact numerical values were adopted, linking all the fundamental SI units to constants of nature:

 

-          the ground state hyperfine splitting frequency of the caesium 133 atom is exactly 9192631770 hertz

-       the speed of light in vacuum  is exactly 299792458 metre per second

-       the Planck constant  is exactly 6.62607015 x 10-34 joule second

-       the elementary charge  is exactly 1.602176634 x 10-19 coulomb

-       the Boltzmann constant  is exactly 1.380649 x 10-23 joule per kelvin

-          the Avogadro constant  is exactly 6.02214076 x 1023 reciprocal mole

-          the luminous efficacy  of monochromatic radiation of frequency 5.4 x 1014 is exactly 683 lumen per watt

 

Such definitions do, of course, presuppose that fundamental constants of nature really are fundamental, a topic that has been the subject of some speculation over many years, see e.g. Barrow (2003). These speculations generally revolve around what might be the case if dimensionless constants such as the fine structure constant varied across the universe. Changes merely in dimensional physical constants, such as the speed of light are generally considered to be less operationally meaningful as such a world would be observationally indistinguishable from our world. A measurement system that is sometimes referred to in such a context involves Planck units.

 


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