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Moon goes metric

9-Jan-2007

One small step for man, one giant leap for mankind’s sanity. NASA has decided that the Moon should be an all-metric zone, and it sounds like IETF standard inter-networking is on the cards too.

The decision is a victory not only for the metric system itself, which by this decision increases its land area in the solar system by 27%, but also for the spirit of international cooperation in exploring the Moon. The decision arose from a series of meetings that brought together representatives from NASA and 13 other space agencies to discuss ways to cooperate and coordinate their lunar exploration programs. Standardizing on the metric system was an obvious step in the right direction.

“When we made the announcement at the meeting, the reps for the other space agencies all gave a little cheer,” says Jeff Volosin, strategy development lead for NASA’s Exploration Systems Mission Directorate. “I think NASA has been seen as maybe a bit stubborn by other space agencies in the past, so this was important as a gesture of our willingness to be cooperative when it comes to the Moon.”

The article is accompanied by this lovely little graphic showing places in our neck of the solar system that don’t primarily use metric: “United States, Liberia, and Burma”

Places that don't use the metric system

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