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Introduction and History
The Metric System Introduction and History
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Why Metric? Countries wanted “standards” for measuring things A standard unit is an exact quantity used as a reference point for measurements (Meter, Gram, Liter) A standard is used throughout the world
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Standards in History Kings used to use their body parts to determine units of measurement. Ex. The standard yard was the distance from the king’s nose to his outstretched arm.
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Kings used feet to measure distance.
This is how the term “foot” came about. Today the standard “foot” in the English system is 12 inches.
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English system is very confusing because it has too many different values.
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The United States is the only major country that still uses the old English system. (also called the Imperial System)
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The Great Mars Mistake Two different groups of scientist were working in the calculations to send a probe to Mars. The American team did their calculations in the English standard and the other team did it in the metric system. (OOPS!)
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Results were Devastating
This made scientists very upset. It cost the space program $125 million. It cost the scientist their time and effort.
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Scientist around the world give the English system the thumbs down.
Scientist needed an exact and uniform system of weights and measurements to be used throughout the world.
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How did the metric system come about?
During the 18th century scientist created a system of measurements to be used world wide. This is how they came up with the length of the standard meter.
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History of the Meter Scientist measured the distance from the equator to the North Pole and divided that into ten million equal parts. This was called the 1-meter. The original meter is kept in a safe in France. A Meter stick is an exact copy of that standard. A meter is divided into 100 equal parts called “centimeters” and 1000 equal parts called “millimeters.”
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History of the Liter Scientists needed a way to measure liquids so they took 10cm and multiplied it by its length x width x height to come up with a standard for measuring volume. The liter is the size of 10 cm3 10cm x 10cm x 10cm Length x Width x Height = Volume The liter is used to measure liquid volumes
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The History of the Gram Scientist needed a standard to measure mass. Mass is the amount of matter in an object. They weighed one cubic centimeter of water and called it a gram.
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The History of the Second
Early astronomers defined 1 second as 24- hours divided by 360. In 1967, scientists redefined it as the time needed for a Cesium atom to vibrate 9.2 billion times.
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Metric Prefixes “Kilo” means thousand (1000)
“Hecto” means hundred (100) “Deka” means ten (10) Base unit “Deci” means one-tenth (1/10) “Centi” means one-hundredth (1/100) “Milli” means one-thousandth (1/1000)
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Metric Word Endings (Bases)
“Meter” – Measures Length “Liter” – Measures Volume (how much space something takes up) “Gram” – Measures mass (how much matter is in an object)
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