Recommendation 1 of the 24th CCEM (2005)
On the possible redefinition of the kilogram
The Consultative Committee for Electricity and Magnetism (CCEM),
considering
- the recent proposal to redefine the kilogram in terms of a fixed value for either the Planck constant or the Avogadro constant at the 23rd General Conference in 2007,
- that the realization of a definition of the kilogram in these terms necessarily requires the permanent availability of experiments that relate mass to fundamental constants,
- the advantages that such a redefinition would bring to the scientific community through the significant reduction in the uncertainties of the SI values of many fundamental constants,
- that a redefinition with a fixed value for the Planck constant, if combined with a redefinition of the ampere fixing the value of the elementary charge, would have further benefits for the scientific community, particularly in electrical metrology,
recalling Resolution 7 of the 21st General Conference (1999), which recommended that national laboratories continue their efforts to refine experiments that link the unit of mass to fundamental or atomic constants with a view to a future redefinition of the kilogram,
noting
- the existing discrepancy of about 1 part in 106 between the results from watt balance and x-ray crystal density measurements,
- the fact that this discrepancy is significant at the practical level and is unlikely to be resolved by 2007,
recommends that
- any decision on redefining the kilogram be deferred until the 24th General Conference in 2011,
- laboratories continue to make their best efforts to produce data for the 2010 CODATA adjustment of the values of the fundamental constants to support a possible redefinition of the kilogram at the 24th General Conference,
- at that time, consideration be given to fixing the values of both the Planck constant and the elementary charge.
DOI : 10.59161/CCEM2005REC1E
The reader should note that the official version of this Resolution is the French text