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On Fri, 26 Sep 2003 10:05:08 -0700, Jim Kelley
wrote: Gene Nygaard wrote: Apparently Halliday and Resnick were a lot smarter a couple of decades earlier, when they were only a little past their prime: Hey Gene, Maybe Halliday and Resnick in fact _avoided_ becoming "past their prime" when they adapted their point of view to the one which now prevails. It isn't a matter of "point of view." This isn't politics or an opinion poll, and it isn't psychology or sociology, and it isn't freshman literature. It's a matter of facts--of standards and definitions. The fact is that pounds are units of mass, and that pounds force also exist (a recent *******ization, of course). Their 1981 Appendix misstates those facts. That's it, plain and simple. Now prevails? I issue you the same challenge I issued to our Metrologist: Show me an official definition of a pound force on the NIST pages. Bet you can't do so. Note that a conditional definition, with a big "if", indicating that this is only one possible acceptable definition, is not sufficient--I want an official definition. If you can't do that, try a broader problem: Show me an official definition of a pound as a unit of force from ANY law of ANY country in the world, or from ANY standard of ANY national or international standards organization, or from ANY standard of ANY professional organization. Halliday and Resnick were right on top of things in 1960, already aware of the change of definition that had taken place only 1 July of the previous year, effective immediately on its publication. If you haven't read what the National Bureau of Standards said in that announcement, take the time now to do so (partial excerpt below). http://www.ngs.noaa.gov/PUBS_LIB/Fed...doc59-5442.pdf http://gssp.wva.net/html.common/refine.pdf Announcement. Effective July 1, 1959, all calibrations in the U.S. customary system of weights and measures carried out by the National Bureau of Standards will continue to be based upon metric measurement standards and except for the U.S. Coast and Geodetic Survey as noted below, will be made in terms of the following exact equivalences and appropriate multiples and submultiples: 1 yard = 0.9144 meter 1 pound (avoirdupois) = 0.453 592 37 kilogram Currently, the units defined by these same equivalences, which have been designated as the International Yard and the International Pound, respectively, will be used by the National Standards Laboratories of Australia, Canada, New Zealand, South Africa, and United Kingdom; thus there will be brought about international accord on the yard and pound by the English-speaking nations of the world, in precise measurements involving these basic units. Now, perhaps you think something changed between 1960 and 1981 when the revised Halliday & Resnick came out. What would that have been? Some change in the law? In the standards kept by the National Bureau of Standards (later replaced by NIST)? Show me some justification for a change, some change in facts, that would justify a different "point of view" as you put it. Or were Halliday and Resnick just terribly prescient, and they foresaw some change that took place between 1981 and today? If so, tell us exactly what that change was. Or maybe you think that the 1959 redefinition is just some sort of "legal definition" and that in the sciences we have some other "real definition" that we go by. Is that your position? No problem if it is, but if that is indeed what you are claiming, please fill us in on a few followup questions: 1. What is the nature of the standard for a pound in its "scientific definition"? Is it something mechanical, something electrical, or what? 2. Who declared whatever the standard is to be the standard? NIST? U.S. Congress? ISO? BIPM? The First International Extraordinary Hydrographic Conference (they are the ones who defined the standard for the international nautical mile)? Some other entity? 3. When was it made the standard? Just the year will do. 4. To whom does the standard apply? In other words, for whom does the defining agency have the authority to make the standards? 5. Along the same lines, if this is a "scientific definition" which differs from the "legal definition," what is its scope? What is "in science"? Does it include Halliday and Resnick's definition of a Btu, and their use of units of Btu/(lb °F) for specific heat capacity? Same for Sears and Zemansky, the textbook cited by the Peacekeeper Engineer? 6. What is the exact relationship between pounds force and the metric units, or the relationship to the greatest precision in which it can be expressed if it is not exact? 7. Even if all this were true, would it mean that the pound is a unit of mass? Is there some rule that says that textbook authors are allowed to bury their heads in the sand, and ignore the real world which does in fact use the definition agreed on by those six national standards laboratories of some of the most advanced nations in the world in 1959? Gene Nygaard http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/Gene_Nygaard/ |
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