The
CGS system had been declared official in 1881, at the first
International Electrical Congress. The
erg was adopted as its unit of energy in 1882.
Wilhelm Siemens, in his inauguration speech as chairman of the
British Association for the Advancement of Science (23 August 1882) first proposed the
joule as unit of
heat, to be derived from the electromagnetic units
ampere and
ohm, in cgs units equivalent to . The naming of the unit in honour of
James Prescott Joule (1818–1889), at the time retired and aged 63, followed the recommendation of Siemens: At the second International Electrical Congress, on 31 August 1889, the joule was officially adopted alongside the
watt and the
quadrant (later renamed to
henry). Joule died in the same year, on 11 October 1889. At the fourth congress (1893), the "international ampere" and "international ohm" were defined, with slight changes in the specifications for their measurement, with the "international joule" being the unit derived from them. In 1935, the
International Electrotechnical Commission (as the successor organisation of the International Electrical Congress) adopted the "
Giorgi system", which by virtue of assuming a defined value for the
magnetic constant also implied a redefinition of the joule. The Giorgi system was approved by the
International Committee for Weights and Measures in 1946. The joule was now no longer defined based on electromagnetic unit, but instead as the unit of
work performed by one unit of force (at the time not yet named
newton) over the distance of 1
metre. The joule was explicitly intended as the unit of energy to be used in both electromagnetic and mechanical contexts. The ratification of the definition at the ninth
General Conference on Weights and Measures, in 1948, added the specification that the joule was also to be preferred as the unit of
heat in the context of
calorimetry, thereby officially deprecating the use of the
calorie. This is the definition declared in the modern
International System of Units in 1960. The definition of the joule as J = kg⋅m2⋅s−2 has remained unchanged since 1946, but the joule as a derived unit has inherited changes in the definitions of the
second (in 1960 and 1967), the
metre (in 1983) and the
kilogram (
in 2019). == Practical examples ==