What can I do with perfectly precise “weights”? [closed]












1














Suppose I have a few "weights". Half of them, and I know which half, has a mass EXACTLY, to infinite precision, twice the other half. I know that very quickly the weights will not be exactly related to each other, due to say dust from the air landing on them unequally. Taking that into account, what practical uses can I do with these weights that takes advantage of the fact that some are twice the mass of others?










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closed as off-topic by Renan, elemtilas, rek, bilbo_pingouin, Mołot Dec 18 at 6:42


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "This question does not appear to be about worldbuilding, within the scope defined in the help center." – rek, bilbo_pingouin, Mołot

If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.









  • 2




    You can crack nuts, if they are heavy enough.
    – Renan
    Dec 18 at 0:36






  • 2




    You can make perfectly precise bruises on the head of your rival when you give him the beat-down of his life. 😀
    – JBH
    Dec 18 at 0:42






  • 2




    @elemtilas Except, you know, aside from it being a kilogram of platinum and thus worth almost $30,000...
    – Arkenstein XII
    Dec 18 at 1:35






  • 1




    @ArkensteinXII -- well, yes. There is that! Put it on Ebay!
    – elemtilas
    Dec 18 at 1:45






  • 1




    @elemtilas For sale: platinum cylinder. Barely used.
    – Dubukay
    Dec 18 at 3:16
















1














Suppose I have a few "weights". Half of them, and I know which half, has a mass EXACTLY, to infinite precision, twice the other half. I know that very quickly the weights will not be exactly related to each other, due to say dust from the air landing on them unequally. Taking that into account, what practical uses can I do with these weights that takes advantage of the fact that some are twice the mass of others?










share|improve this question















closed as off-topic by Renan, elemtilas, rek, bilbo_pingouin, Mołot Dec 18 at 6:42


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "This question does not appear to be about worldbuilding, within the scope defined in the help center." – rek, bilbo_pingouin, Mołot

If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.









  • 2




    You can crack nuts, if they are heavy enough.
    – Renan
    Dec 18 at 0:36






  • 2




    You can make perfectly precise bruises on the head of your rival when you give him the beat-down of his life. 😀
    – JBH
    Dec 18 at 0:42






  • 2




    @elemtilas Except, you know, aside from it being a kilogram of platinum and thus worth almost $30,000...
    – Arkenstein XII
    Dec 18 at 1:35






  • 1




    @ArkensteinXII -- well, yes. There is that! Put it on Ebay!
    – elemtilas
    Dec 18 at 1:45






  • 1




    @elemtilas For sale: platinum cylinder. Barely used.
    – Dubukay
    Dec 18 at 3:16














1












1








1







Suppose I have a few "weights". Half of them, and I know which half, has a mass EXACTLY, to infinite precision, twice the other half. I know that very quickly the weights will not be exactly related to each other, due to say dust from the air landing on them unequally. Taking that into account, what practical uses can I do with these weights that takes advantage of the fact that some are twice the mass of others?










share|improve this question















Suppose I have a few "weights". Half of them, and I know which half, has a mass EXACTLY, to infinite precision, twice the other half. I know that very quickly the weights will not be exactly related to each other, due to say dust from the air landing on them unequally. Taking that into account, what practical uses can I do with these weights that takes advantage of the fact that some are twice the mass of others?







technology






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share|improve this question













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edited Dec 18 at 6:13

























asked Dec 18 at 0:18









roobee

453




453




closed as off-topic by Renan, elemtilas, rek, bilbo_pingouin, Mołot Dec 18 at 6:42


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "This question does not appear to be about worldbuilding, within the scope defined in the help center." – rek, bilbo_pingouin, Mołot

If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.




closed as off-topic by Renan, elemtilas, rek, bilbo_pingouin, Mołot Dec 18 at 6:42


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "This question does not appear to be about worldbuilding, within the scope defined in the help center." – rek, bilbo_pingouin, Mołot

If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.








  • 2




    You can crack nuts, if they are heavy enough.
    – Renan
    Dec 18 at 0:36






  • 2




    You can make perfectly precise bruises on the head of your rival when you give him the beat-down of his life. 😀
    – JBH
    Dec 18 at 0:42






  • 2




    @elemtilas Except, you know, aside from it being a kilogram of platinum and thus worth almost $30,000...
    – Arkenstein XII
    Dec 18 at 1:35






  • 1




    @ArkensteinXII -- well, yes. There is that! Put it on Ebay!
    – elemtilas
    Dec 18 at 1:45






  • 1




    @elemtilas For sale: platinum cylinder. Barely used.
    – Dubukay
    Dec 18 at 3:16














  • 2




    You can crack nuts, if they are heavy enough.
    – Renan
    Dec 18 at 0:36






  • 2




    You can make perfectly precise bruises on the head of your rival when you give him the beat-down of his life. 😀
    – JBH
    Dec 18 at 0:42






  • 2




    @elemtilas Except, you know, aside from it being a kilogram of platinum and thus worth almost $30,000...
    – Arkenstein XII
    Dec 18 at 1:35






  • 1




    @ArkensteinXII -- well, yes. There is that! Put it on Ebay!
    – elemtilas
    Dec 18 at 1:45






  • 1




    @elemtilas For sale: platinum cylinder. Barely used.
    – Dubukay
    Dec 18 at 3:16








2




2




You can crack nuts, if they are heavy enough.
– Renan
Dec 18 at 0:36




You can crack nuts, if they are heavy enough.
– Renan
Dec 18 at 0:36




2




2




You can make perfectly precise bruises on the head of your rival when you give him the beat-down of his life. 😀
– JBH
Dec 18 at 0:42




You can make perfectly precise bruises on the head of your rival when you give him the beat-down of his life. 😀
– JBH
Dec 18 at 0:42




2




2




@elemtilas Except, you know, aside from it being a kilogram of platinum and thus worth almost $30,000...
– Arkenstein XII
Dec 18 at 1:35




@elemtilas Except, you know, aside from it being a kilogram of platinum and thus worth almost $30,000...
– Arkenstein XII
Dec 18 at 1:35




1




1




@ArkensteinXII -- well, yes. There is that! Put it on Ebay!
– elemtilas
Dec 18 at 1:45




@ArkensteinXII -- well, yes. There is that! Put it on Ebay!
– elemtilas
Dec 18 at 1:45




1




1




@elemtilas For sale: platinum cylinder. Barely used.
– Dubukay
Dec 18 at 3:16




@elemtilas For sale: platinum cylinder. Barely used.
– Dubukay
Dec 18 at 3:16










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















6














The ways you can take advantage of these weights is really dependent on what kinds of advantages you are looking for. You can't make money in the stock market with them. You can't go to war with them. You can't make money in a casino with them (or can you?). You really have to figure out what sort of things you're interested in doing.



You may be interested in the IPK and its six official copies. Metrologists define the kilogram from the IPK. It's so special that it's never used to measure anything other than to compare it against the clone IPKs. And it has been drifting for some reason yet unknown to metrologists. They're about 50 micrograms off of being the same 1,000 grams masses.



So what can you do with these masses? Well, you can look at what metrologists do with their IPKs. If there was anything more valuable to be done with them, you'd see them doing it.



Of course, next May, we are finally shifting off of this standard. Instead, the kilogram will be fixed precicely to Planks constant.



Avagadro's number is also getting fixed, which means the number of atoms in a kilogram mass like this is fixed:



enter image description here



So at the very least, your masses should be good for one heck of a good guess for "how many jelly bean atoms are in this jelly bean jar!"






share|improve this answer





















  • THANK YOU for that article about shifting the SI standard. I didn't know that and I'm delighted to read it. What an amazing thing. Will the world collapse for it? Heavens, no! But I'll be able to sue Hostess for not giving me every gram of that dang Twinkie!
    – JBH
    Dec 18 at 1:12



















4














Nothing. Perfectly precise weights are only useful if you intend to build a standard based off of it like the current SI units and the definition of a Kilogram (before they changed it). Of course the biggest issue would be getting everyone to agree to your perfectly precise standardized weight (Stares at America in particular) and your weight can't change. So that's no touching and no decaying checked off. Outside of that, your weight is just a weight.



Things you can do with a weight:




  • Hold down paper

  • Lift it for sick gains

  • Throw it

  • Tell people how perfect it is and have them proceed to touch or breath on it changing the weight

  • Hold open a door

  • Compare it to yourself and figure out how much you weigh

  • Compare it to other products to determine how much they weigh

  • Do some math problems involving X, 2X and 1/2 X






share|improve this answer




























    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes








    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    6














    The ways you can take advantage of these weights is really dependent on what kinds of advantages you are looking for. You can't make money in the stock market with them. You can't go to war with them. You can't make money in a casino with them (or can you?). You really have to figure out what sort of things you're interested in doing.



    You may be interested in the IPK and its six official copies. Metrologists define the kilogram from the IPK. It's so special that it's never used to measure anything other than to compare it against the clone IPKs. And it has been drifting for some reason yet unknown to metrologists. They're about 50 micrograms off of being the same 1,000 grams masses.



    So what can you do with these masses? Well, you can look at what metrologists do with their IPKs. If there was anything more valuable to be done with them, you'd see them doing it.



    Of course, next May, we are finally shifting off of this standard. Instead, the kilogram will be fixed precicely to Planks constant.



    Avagadro's number is also getting fixed, which means the number of atoms in a kilogram mass like this is fixed:



    enter image description here



    So at the very least, your masses should be good for one heck of a good guess for "how many jelly bean atoms are in this jelly bean jar!"






    share|improve this answer





















    • THANK YOU for that article about shifting the SI standard. I didn't know that and I'm delighted to read it. What an amazing thing. Will the world collapse for it? Heavens, no! But I'll be able to sue Hostess for not giving me every gram of that dang Twinkie!
      – JBH
      Dec 18 at 1:12
















    6














    The ways you can take advantage of these weights is really dependent on what kinds of advantages you are looking for. You can't make money in the stock market with them. You can't go to war with them. You can't make money in a casino with them (or can you?). You really have to figure out what sort of things you're interested in doing.



    You may be interested in the IPK and its six official copies. Metrologists define the kilogram from the IPK. It's so special that it's never used to measure anything other than to compare it against the clone IPKs. And it has been drifting for some reason yet unknown to metrologists. They're about 50 micrograms off of being the same 1,000 grams masses.



    So what can you do with these masses? Well, you can look at what metrologists do with their IPKs. If there was anything more valuable to be done with them, you'd see them doing it.



    Of course, next May, we are finally shifting off of this standard. Instead, the kilogram will be fixed precicely to Planks constant.



    Avagadro's number is also getting fixed, which means the number of atoms in a kilogram mass like this is fixed:



    enter image description here



    So at the very least, your masses should be good for one heck of a good guess for "how many jelly bean atoms are in this jelly bean jar!"






    share|improve this answer





















    • THANK YOU for that article about shifting the SI standard. I didn't know that and I'm delighted to read it. What an amazing thing. Will the world collapse for it? Heavens, no! But I'll be able to sue Hostess for not giving me every gram of that dang Twinkie!
      – JBH
      Dec 18 at 1:12














    6












    6








    6






    The ways you can take advantage of these weights is really dependent on what kinds of advantages you are looking for. You can't make money in the stock market with them. You can't go to war with them. You can't make money in a casino with them (or can you?). You really have to figure out what sort of things you're interested in doing.



    You may be interested in the IPK and its six official copies. Metrologists define the kilogram from the IPK. It's so special that it's never used to measure anything other than to compare it against the clone IPKs. And it has been drifting for some reason yet unknown to metrologists. They're about 50 micrograms off of being the same 1,000 grams masses.



    So what can you do with these masses? Well, you can look at what metrologists do with their IPKs. If there was anything more valuable to be done with them, you'd see them doing it.



    Of course, next May, we are finally shifting off of this standard. Instead, the kilogram will be fixed precicely to Planks constant.



    Avagadro's number is also getting fixed, which means the number of atoms in a kilogram mass like this is fixed:



    enter image description here



    So at the very least, your masses should be good for one heck of a good guess for "how many jelly bean atoms are in this jelly bean jar!"






    share|improve this answer












    The ways you can take advantage of these weights is really dependent on what kinds of advantages you are looking for. You can't make money in the stock market with them. You can't go to war with them. You can't make money in a casino with them (or can you?). You really have to figure out what sort of things you're interested in doing.



    You may be interested in the IPK and its six official copies. Metrologists define the kilogram from the IPK. It's so special that it's never used to measure anything other than to compare it against the clone IPKs. And it has been drifting for some reason yet unknown to metrologists. They're about 50 micrograms off of being the same 1,000 grams masses.



    So what can you do with these masses? Well, you can look at what metrologists do with their IPKs. If there was anything more valuable to be done with them, you'd see them doing it.



    Of course, next May, we are finally shifting off of this standard. Instead, the kilogram will be fixed precicely to Planks constant.



    Avagadro's number is also getting fixed, which means the number of atoms in a kilogram mass like this is fixed:



    enter image description here



    So at the very least, your masses should be good for one heck of a good guess for "how many jelly bean atoms are in this jelly bean jar!"







    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered Dec 18 at 0:37









    Cort Ammon

    108k17187383




    108k17187383












    • THANK YOU for that article about shifting the SI standard. I didn't know that and I'm delighted to read it. What an amazing thing. Will the world collapse for it? Heavens, no! But I'll be able to sue Hostess for not giving me every gram of that dang Twinkie!
      – JBH
      Dec 18 at 1:12


















    • THANK YOU for that article about shifting the SI standard. I didn't know that and I'm delighted to read it. What an amazing thing. Will the world collapse for it? Heavens, no! But I'll be able to sue Hostess for not giving me every gram of that dang Twinkie!
      – JBH
      Dec 18 at 1:12
















    THANK YOU for that article about shifting the SI standard. I didn't know that and I'm delighted to read it. What an amazing thing. Will the world collapse for it? Heavens, no! But I'll be able to sue Hostess for not giving me every gram of that dang Twinkie!
    – JBH
    Dec 18 at 1:12




    THANK YOU for that article about shifting the SI standard. I didn't know that and I'm delighted to read it. What an amazing thing. Will the world collapse for it? Heavens, no! But I'll be able to sue Hostess for not giving me every gram of that dang Twinkie!
    – JBH
    Dec 18 at 1:12











    4














    Nothing. Perfectly precise weights are only useful if you intend to build a standard based off of it like the current SI units and the definition of a Kilogram (before they changed it). Of course the biggest issue would be getting everyone to agree to your perfectly precise standardized weight (Stares at America in particular) and your weight can't change. So that's no touching and no decaying checked off. Outside of that, your weight is just a weight.



    Things you can do with a weight:




    • Hold down paper

    • Lift it for sick gains

    • Throw it

    • Tell people how perfect it is and have them proceed to touch or breath on it changing the weight

    • Hold open a door

    • Compare it to yourself and figure out how much you weigh

    • Compare it to other products to determine how much they weigh

    • Do some math problems involving X, 2X and 1/2 X






    share|improve this answer


























      4














      Nothing. Perfectly precise weights are only useful if you intend to build a standard based off of it like the current SI units and the definition of a Kilogram (before they changed it). Of course the biggest issue would be getting everyone to agree to your perfectly precise standardized weight (Stares at America in particular) and your weight can't change. So that's no touching and no decaying checked off. Outside of that, your weight is just a weight.



      Things you can do with a weight:




      • Hold down paper

      • Lift it for sick gains

      • Throw it

      • Tell people how perfect it is and have them proceed to touch or breath on it changing the weight

      • Hold open a door

      • Compare it to yourself and figure out how much you weigh

      • Compare it to other products to determine how much they weigh

      • Do some math problems involving X, 2X and 1/2 X






      share|improve this answer
























        4












        4








        4






        Nothing. Perfectly precise weights are only useful if you intend to build a standard based off of it like the current SI units and the definition of a Kilogram (before they changed it). Of course the biggest issue would be getting everyone to agree to your perfectly precise standardized weight (Stares at America in particular) and your weight can't change. So that's no touching and no decaying checked off. Outside of that, your weight is just a weight.



        Things you can do with a weight:




        • Hold down paper

        • Lift it for sick gains

        • Throw it

        • Tell people how perfect it is and have them proceed to touch or breath on it changing the weight

        • Hold open a door

        • Compare it to yourself and figure out how much you weigh

        • Compare it to other products to determine how much they weigh

        • Do some math problems involving X, 2X and 1/2 X






        share|improve this answer












        Nothing. Perfectly precise weights are only useful if you intend to build a standard based off of it like the current SI units and the definition of a Kilogram (before they changed it). Of course the biggest issue would be getting everyone to agree to your perfectly precise standardized weight (Stares at America in particular) and your weight can't change. So that's no touching and no decaying checked off. Outside of that, your weight is just a weight.



        Things you can do with a weight:




        • Hold down paper

        • Lift it for sick gains

        • Throw it

        • Tell people how perfect it is and have them proceed to touch or breath on it changing the weight

        • Hold open a door

        • Compare it to yourself and figure out how much you weigh

        • Compare it to other products to determine how much they weigh

        • Do some math problems involving X, 2X and 1/2 X







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Dec 18 at 1:02









        Shadowzee

        7,1751135




        7,1751135















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