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In the margins: Why aliens won't use the metric system

No, I'm not talking about Americans. I'm talking about intelligent life out in the cosmos.

Intelligent life, if it's out there, would not use the international system of units.

Metres, kilograms, seconds鈥攁ll of these standards used to measure everyday life were originally taken from observable features of nature.

The metre was originally defined to be one-ten-millionth (that's 1鈦10,000,000) of the distance between the North Pole and the equator. A kilogram was originally the weight of a litre of water at , but that proved too variable. Now it's defined by , a metal cylinder secreted away in a vault outside Paris.

So unless some alien colony out there is obsessed with Planet Earth and is trying to emulate everything we do (please, no, don't), they'll likely have developed their own standards for quantifying whatever world they're living in.

Which could make it a little tricky if we ever need to communicate with them in this way. After all, even humans can't get it right sometimes. In 1999, in Mars' when software (supplied by a contractor) calculated the force produced by the probe's thrusters in US customary units when NASA was expecting measurements in metric.

(Incidentally, the next time we put men and women on the Moon, all measurements will .)

that NASA sent up with the famously carries the definitive . But it also carries encoded pictures.

In the same way that we initially based the metric system on measurements of nature, use the most common element in the universe to define seconds, metres and grams. The time, size and scale of our Earthling lives will be communicated to aliens through a simple sketch displaying the mass and energy of a hydrogen atom.

Provided by Particle

This article first appeared on , a science news website based at Scitech, Perth, Australia. Read the .

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