Before Monday, a kilogram equaled about 2.2 pounds. After Monday, it equals ... well, about 2.2 pounds. But Monday also marks a scientific milestone for the metric mass—from now on, it will be measured differently, more precisely. No longer will be it based on an actual physical object, one that has been kept in a climate-controlled vault for more than a century. Instead, it will be based on a constant of physics. The details:
- The old: Since 1889, the kilogram has been defined by Le Grand K, or the International Prototype Kilogram, which is literally a piece of metal kept in a vault at the International Bureau of Weights and Measures in Sevres, France, reports Vox. Replicas of the platinum-iridium alloy exist around the world, all used to calibrate scales and such and to make sure that a kilogram is, in fact, a kilogram.
- The problem: Physical objects change, no matter how carefully handled. Even air particles can affect things. Scientists began detecting minute differences between the mass of the prototype and the replicas—a difference approximately equivalent to the weight of an eyelash, explains CNN.