http://www.dailyemerald.com/vnews/display.v/ART/2003/10/24/3f993bb166732

Measurement schizophrenia creates havoc 

Travis Willse
Rivalless wit
October 24, 2003 


The 1990s were a good time for the nation's space program and, indeed,
humanity's exploration of the cosmos. The space shuttle Endeavour left
and returned on its maiden voyage (1992); the Galileo probe put newer
technology to work (for the entire decade), letting humans remotely
explore Jupiter and its moons in more scientific depth than ever before;
and the Hubble Space Telescope captured images of the farthest depths of
the visible universe (1993, after repairs corrected for a so-called
"spherical aberration" in the telescope's lens) as well as the first
direct picture of a planet outside our solar system (1998). Surely, all
are magnificent achievements indicative of humanity's tireless curiosity
and remarkable ingenuity. 

In late 1998, NASA launched a satellite, the Mars Climate Orbiter (which
was built in part by contractor Lockheed Martin Corp.). The probe was
designed to collect information about the Red Planet's atmosphere, and
to relay data from a parallel mission, the Mars Polar Lander. On Sept.
23, 1999, the Orbiter fired its engines and rocketed to within 60
kilometers of the planet's surface, fatally closer than planned.
According to a NASA master catalog entry, the resulting friction and
atmospheric stresses likely destroyed the $125 million craft. 

What caused such a grievous problem? Not the usual difficulties of
engineering machines for (literally) out-of-this-world exploration, but
an error of the sort we learn to avoid in elementary school: For a
critical spacecraft operation, NASA used the metric unit for force (the
newton), while Lockheed Martin used the English unit (the familiar
pound). The bad number-crunching signaled the craft to misfire, sending
a cool eighth of a billion dollars of taxpayer money careening toward
the Martian surface, an ignominious counterpoint to years of general
NASA successes. 

While a later NASA inquiry cited problems with the project's validation
-- rather than a gross oversight on the part of Lockheed Martin
engineers, the problem itself represents a subtle but bizarre schism in
national policy. 

Accordingly, the incident didn't reflect problems with the antiquated
English measurement system itself but rather the sometimes gross
inconvenience of using two systems. Using the English system alone,
however, is almost as bad. The metric system is easier to remember,
quicker to use and less prone to mistakes. 

One of metric system's biggest obstacles in America has been a record of
false starts. The Metric Conversion Act of 1975 established the Metric
Board to encourage metrication and finally designated the system as the
preferred one for American use. The board dissolved in 1982 because it
lacked a real mandate. 

The most important federal advance in implementing the system came a few
years later, when Congress passed the Omnibus Trade and Competitiveness
Act of 1988, which directed all federal agencies to adopt the metric
system by the end of 1992; the metrication of the federal government is
now near-complete. 

But, no thanks to more dilution of legislation and the dogged
persistence of certain entrenched interests, the nation now sits in a
sort of policy limbo. 

A 1998 federal mandate originally required builders to use the metric
system in all federally funded highway projects but eventually made
compliance optional for state governments. More than 80 percent of the
states were certified as "metric-ready," and were using metric units
when building government buildings. 

Since that participation became optional, however, suppliers and some
contractors have pressured more than half of those states to return to
the unwieldy English system, according to a Silicon Valley / San Jose
Business Journal article. As of 2000, 14 state departments of
transportation used the metric system, 28 used the English system and
the last eight allow use of either system. The private sector lags much
further behind in adoption. Clearly, the nation suffers from a peculiar
measurement schizophrenia that's at best largely inconvenient. 

Possibly the most compelling case for metrication is a simple
what's-popular-is-what's-right argument. The only other nations still
holding out with an archaic measurement system are Liberia and Myanmar;
that means about 95 percent of the world's nations, by population, use
the more convenient metric system. The benefits of streamlined
international trade alone would be worth the switch; the ease of
everyday calculations are icing on the metrical cake. 


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