📏
During the French Revolution, many people in France realized that their numerous local measures and weights systems of measurement were archaic, needed to be changed and - ideally - unified. That's exactly what
Charles Maurice de Talleyrand wanted to implement: a radical change in regard to the way units were to be measured.
In 1790, he proposed to the French NationalAssembly the development of a new system.Other nations were also asked to co-operate.Great Britain did not want anything to do with the creation of a new system of measurement though.
📏
In 1791, the French Academy of Sciences decided to set up a commission and one of itsimplementations was the standardized definition of length based on the size of the Earth. Length would now be defined via the metre, which would be equal to 1/10 000 000 of the length of the meridian arc from the equator to the north pole.
📏
The metric system follows a pattern that is decimal.
Units can easily be divided or multiplied
by an integer power of ten. For example:
1/10 of a metre is a decimetre (0.1 metre)
1/100 of a metre is a centimetre
(0.01 metre) ["cent" in Frenchmeans hundred)]
1/1000 of a metre isa millimetre (0.001 metre) ["mille" in French means thousand].
The hectometre is 100 metres and the kilometer is1000 metres.
The metre (length), the kilogram (mass), the ampere (electric current), the mole (amount of substance),
kelvin (temperature), candela (light intensity) and the second (time).
SI is always adapting to new technologies and the need to be as precise as possible.
📏 Hence, in the SI, the metre is defined as
1 / 299 792 458 of the distance light can travel in one second. As for the kilogram, initially defined as the mass of one cubic decimetre of water at 4 degrees Celsius, it is now defined by SI via the
Planck constant.
📏
In 1975, the
United States' Metric Conversion Act did declare that the metric system was the preferable system for weights and measures but it did not suspend the use of other units in thecountry.
As of today, the United States does not use the metric system on a wide scale.
Royal mathematician Ole Rømer established a national system in 1683. The Danish mile was then equivalent to 4 minutes of arc latitude, the alen had a length of 63 cm and the pund was almost 500 grams.