Download - Triangulating the Meridian

Transcript
Page 1: Triangulating the Meridian

Triangulating the Meridian

Two Men’s Quest for the Meter Through War and Revolution

Page 2: Triangulating the Meridian

The Astronomers and the King

• On June 19, 1791, the French Revolution was about to begin

• King Louis XVI met with two astronomers, members of the Academy of Sciences

• The King authorized a huge undertaking: measure the Earth in order to standardize the length of the meter

Jean-Dominique, comte de Cassini

King Louis XVI of France

Pierre Mechain

The Palais des Tuileries

Page 3: Triangulating the Meridian

Measurements Varied

• The volume of a “standard” bushel of corn was controlled by each local community

• The standard units of length, weight, and volume might change to compensate for bad times, such as decreasing the amount of bread in each loaf

• This is called a “Just Price” economy• It was confusing and could be unfairly

manipulated

Page 4: Triangulating the Meridian

Enter the Savants

• Many savants (scientists or other learned people) and legislators wanted a standard

• In 1789, the nobility renounced all their legal privileges, leading they way to new laws governing measures

• The Paris Academy of Scientists designed the new system

Page 5: Triangulating the Meridian

Natural Measures

• During the French Revolution people wanted the new measures to be natural, not based on antiquated notions

• Between 1793 and 1795 France adopted a ten hour day by decree, although it was rarely used

• They tried to mandate angle measurements in 400 grads per circle (instead of 360º) but mostly failed

Page 6: Triangulating the Meridian

The Meter Controls Them All

• One liter is one thousand cubic centimeters

• One gram is the weight of one cubic centimeter of water

Page 7: Triangulating the Meridian

The Meridian• One meter is supposed

to be one ten millionth of the distance from the equator to the pole

• The savants needed to accurately measure the size of the earth over a long distance

• They chose Dunkirk to Barcelona

Page 8: Triangulating the Meridian

Triangulation• If you know the

angles of two triangles and one side, you can find the other sides

• The astronomers used special instruments to sight from one vertex to another

Page 9: Triangulating the Meridian

Solving Triangles

• To find missing sides of general triangles, use the Law of Sines and the Law of Cosines

• Actual surveying must account for height also

Page 10: Triangulating the Meridian

Revolution and Adventure!

• Two expeditions set out, one north and the other south

• Several times they skirted war zones

• They were captured by the Spanish army and the Italian navy

• They climbed steep hills to windswept lookout towers that marked each vertex

Page 11: Triangulating the Meridian

CreditsImages:

Cassini - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Jean_%28Jacques%29_Dominique_de_Cassini.jpg,Mechain - http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Pierre_mechain.jpgLouis XVI - http://www.educatorunderground.com/bios/Louis%20XVI.htmlThe Palais des Tuileries - http://saint-sevin.pagesperso-orange.fr/pageg.htmMerdian map and triangulation map from The Measure of All Things, Ken Adler, 2002