Artifacts, Begone! NIST Improves Its Flagship Device for Measuring Mass

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Artifacts, Begone! NIST Improves Its Flagship Device for Measuring Mass

NIST-4 Kibble balance has a large metal wheel on the right and a row of curling wires connecting other parts together.

In a brightly lit subterranean lab at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) sits a room-sized electromechanical machine called the NIST-4 Kibble balance.

The instrument can already measure the mass of objects of roughly 1 kilogram, about as heavy as a quart of milk, as accurately as any device in the world. But now, NIST researchers have further improved their Kibble balance’s performance by adding to it a custom-built device that provides an exact definition of electrical resistance. The device is called the quantum Hall array resistance standard (QHARS), and it consists of a set of several smaller devices that use a quirk of quantum physics to generate extremely precise amounts of electrical resistance. The researchers describe their work in a Nature Communications paper.

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Two circular disks are quartz crystal resonators with front and back electrodes.

Universe in the Balance

Feb. 12, 2020
Researchers at NIST have found a way to link measurements made by a device integral to microchip fabrication and other industries directly to the recently redefined International System of Units (SI, the modern metric system).

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