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referentiemeters

Referentiemeters are standardized length artifacts used as reference lengths in calibration and metrology. A referentiemeter is not an SI unit by itself; rather, it is a physical object whose length is known with a defined uncertainty and linked to the SI meter through a traceability chain. The term is used in some contexts to denote reference length standards that support the calibration of measuring devices and the validation of measurement methods.

Realization and traceability typically involve a precise bar, a calibrated set of gauge blocks, or a small

Applications include calibration of length-measuring instruments (rulers, micrometers, calipers), coordinate measuring machines, optical comparators, and other

Maintenance and lifecycle are important: referentiemeters are handled to minimize damage, periodically re-verified, and replaced when

assembly
designed
to
represent
a
defined
length.
These
artifacts
are
manufactured
from
materials
with
low
thermal
expansion,
such
as
Invar
or
Zerodur,
and
are
measured
and
certified
using
high-precision
techniques,
often
including
laser
interferometry.
They
are
stored
and
used
under
climate-controlled
conditions,
with
length
specified
at
a
reference
temperature
(commonly
around
20°C).
Their
certified
length
includes
an
uncertainty
budget
that
accounts
for
artifact
measurement,
environmental
factors,
and
time-dependent
drift.
metrological
equipment.
They
may
also
serve
educational
purposes
or
benchmarks
in
industrial
quality
control
to
ensure
consistency
across
production
and
inspection
processes.
drift
or
damage
pushes
them
beyond
tolerance.
They
sit
alongside
other
length
standards
in
metrology
infrastructures,
forming
part
of
the
broader
system
that
ensures
traceable,
accurate
length
measurement
across
industries.