Guide for the Use of the International System of Units (SI)
75
[12] Federal Register, Vol. 33, No. 146, p. 10755, July 27, 1968.
[13] Federal Register, Vol. 55, No. 245, p. 52242, December 20, 1990.
[14] Federal Register, Vol. 56, No. 1, p. 160, January 2, 1991.
[15] Federal Register, Vol. 56, No. 145, p. 35801, July 29, 1991.
[16] Federal Register, Vol. 63, No. 144, p. 40334, July 28, 1998.
[17] Preferred Metric Units for General Use by the Federal Government, Federal Standard 376B
(General Services Administration, Washington, DC, 1993).
[18] Quantities and Units in Radiation Protection Dosimetry, ICRU Report 51, 1993 (International
Commission on Radiation Units and Measurements, 7910 Woodmont Avenue, Bethesda, MD,
20814).
[19] Values from the 2006 adjustment of the fundamental physical constants can be found at the NIST
website:
http://physics.nist.gov/cuu/Constants/index.html
. The definitive paper describing the 2006
adjustment has been published in two journals: P. J. Mohr, B. N. Taylor, and D. B. Newell, Rev.
Mod. Phys. 80(2), 633-730 (2008); J. Phys. Chem. Ref. Data. 37(3), 1187-1284 (2008). The paper
may be obtained electronically through a link on the above web page.
[20] The term standard uncertainty used in the footnotes to Table 7 of this Guide, and the related terms
expanded uncertainty and relative expanded uncertainty used in some of the examples of Sec. 7.10.3,
are discussed in ISO, Guide to the Expression of Uncertainty in Measurement (International
Organization for Standardization, Geneva, Switzerland, 1995); and in B. N. Taylor and C. E. Kuyatt,
Guidelines for Evaluating and Expressing the Uncertainty of NIST Measurement Results, Natl. Inst.
Stand. Technol. Spec. Publ. 1297, 1994 Edition (U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, DC,
September 1994).
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