New Atomic Clock Pushes Boundaries of Accuracy 43
Neophytus writes "An interesting story on the BBC reports on how a new type of atomic clock is near completion that would only loose about a second in every 100 million years. Within ten years they hope to have a clock with billion year accuracy which would potentially bring advances in disease research by watching timing genes. More reports from this year's AAAS Annual meeting can be found on the BBC, and information about the event on the AAAS Annual Meeting website."
Re:"boundary of accuracy"? (Score:1)
First "lose" not "loose" post (Score:3, Insightful)
How can people continue to do this? AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAARRRRRRRRRRRRRRGGGGGGGGGGG
Re:First "lose" not "loose" post (Score:1)
Surely more accurate clocks will make the world a more functional place. I am trying do devise a program that will work with the network time protocol so that I and my equipment can leap over any more of these headed our way. I always wondered why the NIST was talking about leap seconds. Yes I know that it will just hit someone else but I feel that I have stopped my share of bullets. If the NIST clocks are leaping seconds, don't blame me for doing the same.
(Congrats on being the first to spot it. My more serious question is after your post. I totally read past the typo until re-reading to see if anyone else had raised my issue.)
Re:First "lose" not "loose" post (Score:1)
Talking about things not making sense, did ne1 else understand the second (no pun intentended) paragraph of the parent post or maybe the poster could shed light there? The first paragraph was funny then the second just started going a bit crazy.
Re:First "lose" not "loose" post (Score:1)
Re:First "lose" not "loose" post (Score:2)
Followed by:
Because you knew, first you asked for explanation? Or, more probable, you asked for explanation and then just claimed you knew. Perhaps you should instead thank whoever clarified my obscure joke, funny or not. Someone did take the time to answer your specific query.
Re:First "lose" not "loose" post (Score:2)
I second the notion that this is a minute problem facing our day, and before the issue at hand goes decadent, we must work around the clock to fix it.
Re:First "lose" not "loose" post (Score:1)
But not to worry, I have a jigsaw and lathe. I will make it round in a few minutes.
Re:First "lose" not "loose" post (Score:2)
Save us, LoseNotLooseGuy! Your assistance is desperately needed!
Re:First "lose" not "loose" post (Score:2)
Who Cares? (Score:1)
"Who cares?!?!?!"
But as I continued, this article kind of answered my questioning for having a clock that acurate, besides the "No, it really is 12:43.35PM coolness factor"
Does anyone know any other good uses for such and exact timing system?
Re:Who Cares? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Who Cares? (Score:1)
> exact timing system?
GPS
Re:Who Cares? (Score:1)
Yeah, but 12:34:56.78 PM is cooler.
Timing is everything (Score:1)
Disease research (Score:4, Insightful)
However I must say that I am puzzled how any new higher precision timing source will directly help biological research in the area of genes. I did follow the recent reports of a genetic timing mechanisms being discovered but how does adding another step of resolution to the best available time source have anything to do with this research? Likely this the new clock will be far removed from any lab doing work with the genetic material in many ways -- geographic, propagation and subject matter. The currently available clocks are certainly no slouches. Are they not sufficient for biological work? How is an improved one going to help?
In part, I ask about this particular point because, while somewhat weakly addressed in the article, it was repeated on /. I am seriously hoping a little light could be shed -- preferably based on knowledge not speculation.
Re:Disease research (Score:1)
Re:Disease research (Score:1)
Still I would welcome a real explanation illustrating how it might apply but I can't see it. It is difficult to say that a more accurate clock wouldn't help but I would give a lot of credence to someone in the field who said that they saw no connection either. Do you work in any area of research genetic biology?
I do not hold and have never held /. up to the same journalistic standards as other media for hopefully obvious reasons.
Re:Disease research (Score:3, Informative)
Accuracy on the order of 1 second in 1 billion years is about 1 part in 3x10^16. I see no way that is important to have for measurements of any observable biological process.
Re:Disease research (Score:1)
It might not seem like much, but didn't someone win a nobel prize for directly observing a single chemical reaction with femtosecond timing? Someone out there must get a hardon for accurate clocks then.
Re:Disease research (Score:2, Informative)
Protein folding is on the order of millseconds, but "something" is always occuring at all time scales. The Music of the Universe covers all frequencies.
In other news ... (Score:5, Funny)
Sounds Good... (Score:2, Informative)
It appears that these clocks are still in the early conceptual stages but they sound a helluva accurate (doubt they'll need more accuracy but u don't know).
Why does that require 1 second in billions of years accuracy?Also, shouldnt these clocks use the measurement system detailed in the official CGPM SI defintion of the second to be used as scientific master clocks.
Can they be sure that what they are measuring does not change (especially if it involves light - although I think scientists have now decided to just assume c is constant now even if it is not and now base other measures (e.g.: the metre) on the value of c)?
Re:Sounds Good... (Score:1)
Given a collection of clocks, whose average is being taken, one could compute an error from that average for any individual. Further any single other clock could be compared to that average and seen to have a better, or worse, stability when compared to an individual of the collection. The new clock type would not have to be based on the canonical mechanism used in the definition of a second. If the new clock turned out to be more stable and the technology was sufficiently accessible, the definition might be updated. The definition of a second is only a convention anyway.
Re:Sounds Good... (Score:2, Informative)
And, as you mentioned, VLBI, where you aim two radio-telescopes far away (like opposite sides of the planet) at the same object and combine the signals to get higher resolution, requires time sync to within a fraction of a cycle of the frequency being observed. This can always use more accurate clocks to make longer observations at higher frequencies.
As for the definition, it is defined that way because that is the most accurate way to measure the second currently known. If somebody finds a better way (like the trapped mercury ion system discussed here), then the second will be redefined in terms of the new, more accurate reference. Just like how the metre was changed in 1983 from a multiple of the wavelength of a certain atom's radiation to 1/299,792,458 of a light-second. This new standard is equal, to the limits of measurement, to the old one, but the limits are those of the old standard; the new one can be measured more precisely.
(See http://www.mel.nist.gov/div821/museum/length.htm [nist.gov] for a description of how it's done... it involves building a highly stable laser, measuring its frequency against the second, using the constant 299,792,458 to compute the wavelength, and then counting wavelengths to get the distance. This gives you the meter to 7.2 parts in 10^12, compared to 2.5 parts in 10^11 for an iodine-stabilized HeNe laser or 4 parts in 10^9 for the old Krypton standard.)
As for it not changing... nothing can ever be proved absolutely, but many people have measured it very carefully and have never observed any variation.
Speed of light (Score:3, Interesting)
It was my understanding that the more precise the clock the easier it would be to test the speed of light.
Re:Speed of light (Score:4, Insightful)
But everyone will just say, "proves special relativity again" instead of "proves that moving fast messes up the timing of atomic clocks".
Re:Speed of light (Score:2)
Re:Speed of light (Score:2)
I believe the clocks on satellites in orbit run at different rates from clocks at the earth's surface.
Additional info (Score:3, Informative)
You can read a little more about the background of this new clock at NIST's archive of a paper in IEEE T. Instrum. Meas. [nist.gov], for those of us who foolishly let our subscription lapse...
It would appear the chief technological development that made this clock possible was the femtosecond laser. The paper also suggests that the average error could be reduced even further than the article suggests (down to attoseconds, perhaps) if higher-order Stark and Zeeman shifts are properly treated. As for practical uses, I personally can't think of any, except to finally answer the question "Does anybody really know what time it is?" But elimination of uncertainties is laudable anyway.
Brownouts (Score:2, Funny)
And the power will never go out, not in 100 million years.
Spelling alert ! (Score:1)
loose = lose;
If only it could lose... (Score:1)
But (Score:2)