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Of all the things that happened last week, one event was particularly, uh, /weighty/.
On November 16th, hundreds of scientists from around the world met in Versailles,
France at the 26th meeting of the General Conference on Weights and Measures —
because yes, we have needed that many of them.
And they unanimously voted to redefine the kilogram mathematically,
tying it to the immutable laws of the universe and democratizing its mass in one fell swoop.
The kilogram has been the unit of mass used by the international system of units,
aka the metric system, for 129 years.
In 1889, scientists decided that a kilogram was the weight of a specific,
ping-pong ball-sized metal cylinder they called the international prototype kilogram,
though it became known as Le Grand K.
This standardized mass measurements around the globe,
but it came with a risk: it was really hard to make sure the cylinder didn't gain or
lose any mass at all.
And anything that might change its mass even the slightest bit would literally change the
definition of a kilogram,
throwing off physics formulas and the calibrations of scales worldwide.
Even under lock and key,
Le Grande K has lost an estimated 50 micrograms, or millionths of a gram, in the last 129 years.
While that's only about the mass of an eyelash, it's a lot in today's nanoscale world,
where everything from effective drug doses to computer parts can weigh much less than
that.
So the scientists in charge of maintaining the metric system wanted to find a less variable
definition for the kilogram.
And that brought them to Planck's constant,
a tiny number that describes how the energy of a photon relates to its frequency.
You can mathematically connect mass to Planck's constant,
which means you can derive what a kilogram is in terms of it—
which is how the kilogram will be defined from May 20, 2019 onwards.
Scientists wanted to make this change for awhile, but hadn't figured out the value
of Planck's constant precisely enough.
That all changed last year, thanks to a machine called a Kibble balance.
No relation to the type of dog food.
A Kibble balance is basically a scale,
but it uses an electromagnet to counterbalance whatever you're weighing, so it essentially
weighs things in terms of energy—
and therefore Planck's constant.
And after next year, all of the base standard measurement units will be based on fundamental
properties of the universe instead of physical objects,
so they won't ever change again—
unless the universe does, I guess.
Hopefully, Le Grand K isn't too bitter about its forced retirement.
And speaking of bitterness,
in other news last week, scientists have finally figured out why so many people like that bitter
brown liquid fuel we call "coffee".
It's not that they don't taste its bitterness.
Quite the opposite actually, according to a paper published last week in the journal
Scientific Reports.
Being more sensitive to the bitter flavor of caffeine is actually correlated with increased
coffee consumption—
probably because they learn to associate the taste of the beverage with caffeine's stimulant
effects.
It's long been thought that people's preferences for bitter foods or drinks were unconsciously
steered by their DNA through variations in taste receptors,
the proteins that sense different bitter and sweet compounds.
So, for example, people who taste bitterness more strongly might avoid bitter things like
brussel sprouts or coffee.
But when studies have tried to connect taste sensitivities to what people eat and drink,
they've gotten mixed results.
That might be because directly measuring variations in taste is a lot of work, so the studies
haven't had enough participants to separate innate effects from learned behaviors.
For this latest paper, an international research team decided to use a massive dataset of over
438,000 people from the United Kingdom—
a couple orders of magnitude bigger than other studies to date.
They wanted to compare genetic variants associated with the perception of bitter tastes to people's
consumption of bitter drinks,
like coffee and tea.
The researchers figured people whose genetics suggested they would taste bitter substances
more strongly wouldn't like the taste of bitter drinks in general, so they'd drink
less of them.
And if they did drink them, they'd pick tea over coffee, since it's the less bitter
of the two.
That held true for predicted sensitivities to the bitter compounds quinine,
which is found in coffee in small amounts, and propylthiouracil, an artificial bitter
compound.
People whose genes suggested sensitivity to them /were/ less likely to drink coffee and
more likely to drink tea.
But weirdly enough, being able to taste /caffeine's/ bitterness, specifically, had the opposite
effect.
The most sensitive genetic variants were associated with about a 20% increase in the likelihood
of downing 4 or more cups of coffee a day.
Which seems weird, until you consider how much of what we do is motivated by reward.
The authors suggested that the buzz you get after drinking caffeine can act as a positive
reward.
And the stuff isn't as bitter as things like quinine, so it doesn't make the drink
completely unpalatable.
That allows people who like caffeine's stimulant effects learn to like the taste that goes
with it.
As for why the strongest caffeine tasters don't drink more tea,
the researchers think that might be because coffee is a more efficient way to get caffeine.
The results suggest that the interplay between genes, taste, and behavior is a lot more complex
than we first thought.
So determining how DNA affects diet and food preferences is going to take a lot more research.
But anecdotal evidence-wise, this is all perfectly consistent my aversion to coffee.
Thanks to a very memorable test for an episode we did a few years ago,
I know I'm a supertaster, which is linked to being able to taste bitterness more strongly,
including from caffeine.
But I don't like how caffeine makes me feel, so to me, coffee is just a bitter drink with
no benefits.
Something else that leaves a bitter taste in my mouth:
hearing about yet another hack that means my banking information might have been stolen.
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