Engineering News Blog

Engineering News

Latest news of interest to engineers. Sourced from GlobalSpec's Engineering News

Previous in Blog: Enormous Underground River Discovered in the Amazon   Next in Blog: 86 Percent of Earth's Species Still Unknown?
Close
Close
Close
Rate Comments: Nested

New Developments in Atomic Clock Technology Beat Accuracy Records

Posted August 29, 2011 8:03 AM

From Engadget:

According to a recent Penn State study that uses a new way to calculate time-telling precision, the CsF2 cesium-based atomic clock at the UK's National Physical Laboratory is almost twice as accurate as originally thought -- meaning it will only gain or lose one single second over the course of 138 million years. This atomic clock isn't the only competitor for best-in-show, as researchers at the University of Tokyo have also announced a new record, claiming their optical lattice atomic clock observes atoms a million times faster than a traditional atomic clock -- achieving accuracy up to 18 digits in a one second measurement. Although researchers say the technology would gain or lose a second significantly faster than the cesium-based variety (31.7 million years), it could change the way scientists perceive time and space, giving us new insights into fundamental constants of physics.

Read the whole article

Reply

Interested in this topic? By joining CR4 you can "subscribe" to
this discussion and receive notification when new comments are added.
Guru
Popular Science - Cosmology - Let's keep knowledge expanding Engineering Fields - Retired Engineers / Mentors - Hobbies - HAM Radio - New Member

Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: North America, Earth
Posts: 4528
Good Answers: 106
#1

Re: New Developments in Atomic Clock Technology Beat Accuracy Records

08/30/2011 7:44 PM

It looks like a great development for finding out about physical constants. Predicting earthquakes was a stretch though. But think - it could notify you a micro-nanosecond before the earthquake happens!

__________________
“I would rather have questions that can't be answered than answers that can't be questioned.” - Richard Feynman
Reply
Reply to Blog Entry

Previous in Blog: Enormous Underground River Discovered in the Amazon   Next in Blog: 86 Percent of Earth's Species Still Unknown?

Advertisement