Measurement (From: Old French Natural Sciences Technology Economics Quantitative Research
Measurement (From: Old French Natural Sciences Technology Economics Quantitative Research
A typical tape measure with both metric and USunits and two US pennies for comparison
Measurements are most commonly made in the SI system, which contains seven fundamental
units: kilogram, metre, candela, second, ampere, kelvin, and mole. Six of these units are
artifact-free (defined without reference to a particular physical object which serves as a
standard); the definition of one remaining unit, the kilogram is still embodied in an artifact which
rests at the BIPM outside Paris. Eventually, it is hoped that new SI definitions will be uniformly
artifact-free.
Artifact-free definitions fix measurements at an exact value related to a physical constant or
other invariable phenomenon in nature, in contrast to standard artifacts which can be damaged
or otherwise change slowly over time. Instead, the measurement unit can only ever change
through increased accuracy in determining the value of the constant it is tied to.
The seven base units in the SI system. Arrows point from units to those that depend on them; as the accuracy of the
former increases, so will the accuracy of the latter.
The first proposal to tie an SI base unit to an experimental standard independent of fiat was
by Charles Sanders Peirce (18391914),[2] who proposed to define the metre in terms of
the wavelength of a spectral line.[3] This directly influenced the MichelsonMorley experiment;
Michelson and Morley cite Peirce, and improve on his method.[4]
Base quantity
Base
Symbo
unit
Current SI constants
New SI constants
(proposed)[6]
time
second
same as current SI
length
metre
same as current SI
mass
kilogram kg
electric current
Ampere
permeability of free
Planck's constant, h
charge of the
temperature
amount of
substance
luminous
intensity
Kelvin
mole
mol
candela
cd
electron, e
Boltzmann's
constant, k
Avogadro constant NA
same as current SI
WASTE DISPOSAL
Generation of waste
Waste minimization
Waste removal
Waste transportation
Waste treatment
Treatment
Landfill disposal
Environmental considerations
Waste management practices are not uniform among: countries (developed and developing
nations); regions (urban and rural area), and sectors (residential and industrial).