The History of the Kilogram
From Platinum to Quantum Physics
Try Weight ConverterFor 130 years, the world's definition of a kilogram depended on a single object: a small cylinder of platinum-iridium alloy locked in a vault outside Paris. Every scale, every weight measurement, every kilogram on Earth was ultimately compared to this one artifact. Then, in 2019, everything changed.
The story of the kilogram is a remarkable journey through the history of measurement—from the chaos of pre-revolutionary France to the cutting edge of quantum physics.
Before the Kilogram: Measurement Chaos
Before the metric system, weight measurement was a nightmare. Every town, every trade, and every country had its own standards. A "pound" in Paris wasn't the same as a pound in Lyon. Merchants faced constant confusion, and opportunities for fraud were rampant.
The French Revolution, with its ideals of equality and rationality, provided the perfect opportunity for reform. In 1790, the National Assembly charged the French Academy of Sciences with creating a universal system of measurement based on nature, not royal decrees or local customs.
The Birth of the Kilogram (1795-1799)
The new system needed a unit of mass. Scientists decided it should be the mass of one cubic decimeter (one liter) of water at its densest temperature (about 4°C). They called this unit the "grave," later renamed the "kilogramme."
But water is impractical as a standard—you can't ship a liter of water around the world and expect it to stay the same. So in 1799, a physical artifact was created: a cylinder of pure platinum that matched the mass of a liter of water as closely as possible. This became the first official kilogram standard.
“The kilogram is the unit of mass; it is equal to the mass of the international prototype of the kilogram.”
The International Prototype Kilogram (1889)
As the metric system spread globally, nations needed a shared standard. In 1889, the International Bureau of Weights and Measures (BIPM) created the International Prototype Kilogram (IPK)—a cylinder of 90% platinum and 10% iridium, about 39 millimeters in diameter and height.
The IPK was stored in a climate-controlled vault at the BIPM headquarters in Sèvres, France, under three nested bell jars. Forty copies were distributed to nations worldwide as national standards. And for 130 years, by definition, this cylinder WAS a kilogram—not approximately, but exactly.
The Problem with Physical Standards
But there was a problem. When scientists periodically compared the national copies to the IPK, they found the copies had drifted in mass relative to each other—by about 50 micrograms over a century. Was the IPK gaining mass (from contamination) while copies stayed constant? Were the copies changing? There was no way to know because the IPK was the definition itself.
The 2019 Revolution: Planck Constant Definition
Scientists had long wanted to redefine the kilogram in terms of fundamental constants of nature—values that don't change over time. After decades of precision experiments, they succeeded.
On May 20, 2019, the kilogram was redefined based on the Planck constant (h), a fundamental value in quantum mechanics. The definition now fixes the Planck constant at exactly:
h = 6.62607015 × 10⁻³⁴ joule-seconds
Through the relationship between mass, energy, and Planck's constant, this defines the kilogram in terms of an unchanging natural constant. The IPK is still kept in Paris, but it's now just a very precise 1-kilogram weight, not THE kilogram.
Timeline of Key Events
| Year | Event | Significance |
|---|---|---|
| 1790 | French Academy begins work on metric system | Foundation of modern measurement |
| 1795 | Kilogram defined as mass of 1L water | First definition |
| 1799 | Platinum kilogram standard created | First physical artifact |
| 1875 | Metre Convention signed | International measurement cooperation |
| 1889 | IPK becomes world standard | Platinum-iridium cylinder |
| 1901 | Mass vs weight distinction clarified | Scientific precision |
| 2011 | Redefinition work approved | Planck constant approach chosen |
| 2019 | New definition takes effect | Based on fundamental constants |
Why It Matters
The new definition might seem like an academic concern, but it has practical implications:
- Stability: The definition can never drift or change over time
- Reproducibility: Any laboratory can theoretically realize the kilogram, not just the BIPM
- Precision: As measurement technology improves, the kilogram can be realized more precisely without changing the definition
- Independence: No single artifact controls world measurements
The kilogram was the last SI unit defined by a physical artifact. Now all seven base units are defined by fundamental constants—a triumph of precision science.
Conclusion
From a liter of water in revolutionary France to the quantum mechanics of the Planck constant, the kilogram's history reflects humanity's quest for ever-greater precision. The 2019 redefinition ensures that future generations won't depend on a single metal cylinder in a Parisian vault but on the unchanging constants of nature itself.