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Metrology: The fabric of science and technology Lafe Spietz TMA class of 1990
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What is metrology? The science of measurement (not weather!) Metrology establishes the international standards for measurement used by all countries in the world in both science and industry Examples: distance, time, mass, temperature, voltage, values of physical and chemical constants
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Why is metrology important and interesting? Standard units and values of constants needed for all science Technological standards make all technology work better and can save lives: fire hydrant standards Measurement of constants can give fundamental insights into the universe: drift of fine structure constant
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Who does metrology? “The Congress shall have Power To… …fix the Standard of Weights and Measures;” From Article I, section 8 of the U.S Constitution: Government labs around the world.
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SI: The International System of Units Length: meter (m) Mass: kilogram (kg) Time: second (s) Electric current: ampere (A) Thermodynamic temperature: kelvin (K) Amount of substance: mole (mol) Luminous intensity: candela (cd) Seven base units: Lots of derived units: Area: m 2 Speed: m/s Force: 1 newton = 1 kg·m/s 2 Voltage: 1 volt = 1 m 2 ·kg/s 3 ·A Frequency: 1 hertz = 1/s Power: 1 watt = 1 kg·m 2 /s 3 Electric Charge: 1 C = 1 A·s
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Hierarchy of units: Kings and queens of units: Time, frequency, distance Dukes and Earls: Current, voltage, resistance Peasants: Mass, temperature, pressure, luminosity
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Clocks: Atomic time One part per quadrillion accuracy!!! Accurate frequency gives accurate distance and time.
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Artifact vs. quantum standards: A metal bar: 1889-1960 The meter is the length of the path traveled by light in vacuum during a time interval of 1/299,792,458 of a second The modern meter:
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The story of mass I: the modern kilogram http://www.bipm.fr The SI kilogram drifts!
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The story of mass II: possible replacements Watt-balance Avogadro’s number Measurement: Roundest object in the world! Goal: 10 parts per billion accuracy
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Temperature: Kelvin, Celsius, and Fahrenheit 294 K 70 F21 C 273.15 K32 F0 C 77 K-321 F-196 C 4.2 K-452 F-269 C 0 K-459.67 F-273.15 C Water freezes Air liquefies Helium liquefies Room temperature Absolute zero
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The kelvin: the SI unit The kelvin, unit of thermodynamic temperature, is the fraction 1/273.16 of the thermodynamic temperature of the triple point of water. (0.006 atm)
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ITS-90: the practical realization of the kelvin Platinum resistance standard Constant volume gas thermometer PV=Nk B T Not primary!!!
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PLTS-2000: the low temperature definition of the kelvin Superconducting fixed points Helium-3 melting pressure thermometer Not primary, and very hard!!
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Electrical noise and temperature: The basic idea All resistors make electrical noise proportional to temperature: hissing of a radio
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Electrical noise and temperature: applications of noise thermometry By measuring the electrical noise of antennas pointed towards space, astronomers can measure the background temperature of the universe! (images courtesy ofNASA/WMAP Science Team)
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Why noise thermometry is hard: Amplifiers add noise, and have complex behavior Must be calibrated accurately to measure temperature accurately
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The Shot Noise Thermometer V P { Relates temperature to voltage, Simplifying amplifier calibration.
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The Shot Noise Thermometer: Total cost of package <10$ Tunnel Junction Built-in Bias Tee (on-board SMT Components) Copper Plumbing parts SMA Connectors for RF Copper Tubing for DC lines A new practical low temperature thermometer
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