Hi all,

 

One approach would be to publicize that one litre of water has a mass of
*exactly* 1 kg, but that the same time to publicize one litre of petrol has
amass of *about* 0.8 kg (which is why it floats).

 

Martin 

 

  _____  

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
Of Bill Hooper
Sent: 07 May 2007 00:29
To: U.S. Metric Association
Subject: [USMA:38606] Re: People oriented metric use

 

 

On 2007 May 6 , at 5:22 PM, STANLEY DOORE wrote:





I did not mean to indicate that one liter of everything weighs one kilogram;
I think most people understand this when they are in grocery stores and they
buy a bag of sugar, a jar of marshmallow fluff or something else.

 

I know for a fact that not everyone really understands that. Yes, they CAN
understand that the mass of a litre is different for different materials but
they sometimes DON'T. They don't stop to think about it and blithely go off
assuming that a litre of anything has a mass of one kilogram unless someone
is on hand to catch their mistake.

 

I think it behooves us always to qualify our statements about a a litre of
water having a mass of one kilogram by emphasizing that this is only for
water (and things that are composed mostly of water). It may need to be
stated only once in any discussion, but it should be said at least once.

Regards,

Bill Hooper

Fernandina Beach, Florida, USA

 

==========================

SImplification Begins With SI.

==========================





 

Reply via email to