PTB is the National Metrology Institute of Germany with scientific and technical service tasks. PTB measures with the highest accuracy and reliability – metrology as the core competence. PTB stands for progress and reliability in metrology for the benefit of society, trade and industry, and science.
Facts about PTB
Sites
Bundesallee 100
38116 Braunschweig
Phone: +49(0)531 592-0
Abbestraße 2-12
10587 Berlin-Charlottenburg
Phone: +49(0)30 3481-0
Willy Wien Laboratory with the Metrology Light Source:
Magnusstr. 9
12489 Berlin
BESSY II:
Albert-Einstein-Str. 15
12489 Berlin
Employees
A total of approx. 2100 members of staff work at PTB, 1700 of them in Braunschweig.
President: Prof. Dr. Cornelia Denz
Since May 2022, Prof. Dr. Cornelia Denz is PTB's president and will shape the guidelines of this 135-year-old institution.
Vice-President: Dr.-Ing. Prof. h. c. Frank Härtig
Member of the Presidential Board: Dr. Jörn Stenger
PTB consists of ten scientific-technical divisions. Two of them, Division 7 (Temperature and Synchrotron Radiation) and Division 8 (Medical Physics and Metrological Information Technology) are located in Berlin. The divisions are divided into about 77 departments or sections and about 200 working groups.
Annual budget
Total budget: approx. 260 million EUR
Additional third-party funds raised for research projects: approx. 24 million EUR
As Germany's national metrology institute, PTB is Germany's highest authority when it comes to correct and reliable measurements.
In the Units and Time Act (Federal Law Gazette, volume 2008, part I, No. 28, p. 1185 ff., 11 July 2008), all tasks related with the realization and dissemination of the units have been assigned to it. All legally relevant aspects of the units as well as the competencies of PTB have been combined in this Act.
PTB's tasks are the determination of fundamental and natural constants, the realization, maintenance and dissemination of the legal units of the SI, and safety technology – supplemented by services such as the German Calibration Service (Deutscher Kalibrierdienst, DKD) and metrology for the area regulated by law, for industry, and for technology transfer. As the basis for its tasks, PTB conducts fundamental research and development in the field of metrology in close cooperation with universities, other research institutions, and industry.
History
1887: | Foundation of the Physikalisch-Technische Reichsanstalt (PTR) in Berlin on the basis of the ideas of Werner von Siemens and Hermann von Helmholtz and on their joint initiative. Helmholtz is nominated the PTR’s first president. |
1898: | First legal tasks: realization and maintenance of the electric units; testing of instruments for measuring electric quantities. |
1950: | Foundation of the Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt (PTB) in Braunschweig. |
1953: | Integration of the PTR in Berlin-Charlottenburg as "Berlin Institute" into PTB. |
1977: | State and industry found the Deutschen Kalibrierdienst (DKD, German Calibration Service) for the state-certified calibration of standards and measuring instruments, which is managed by PTB. |
1990: | Assumption of some of the tasks of the metrology department of the "Amt für Standardisierung, Messwesen und Warenprüfung" (ASMW, Agency for Standardization, Metrology and Commodities Testing) of the former German Democratic Republic. At this point in time, PTB has a staff of 2,000. |
2002: | Evaluation of the PTB by an expert committee appointed by the Federal Ministry of Economics. |
2008: | PTB is evaluated by the Science Council by order of the Federal Government - with excellent results. |
2012: | "125 years exactly": PTB looks back on a 125-year-old (success) story in March 2012 – with an international symposium and a festive ceremony in the Braunschweiger Stadthalle (Braunschweig Civic Centre) |