New US Atomic Clock Goes Live 127
PaisteUser (810863) writes with news about a new, hyper-accurate atomic clock unveiled by the National Institute of Standards and Technology. "A new atomic clock, so accurate it will lose or gain only one second every 300 million years, was unveiled Thursday by the National Institute of Standards and Technology, a branch of the U.S. Department of Commerce. The NIST-F2 had been in development for about a decade and is three times more accurate than the F1, which has been in use since 1999. The institute will continue operating both clocks for now at its campus in Boulder, Colorado."
Ah another seemingly benign NIST approved standard (Score:4, Funny)
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Ahhh...Slashdot...where the first post for literally any submission is likely to reference NSA backdoors.
Re:Ah another seemingly benign NIST approved stand (Score:5, Funny)
Is the new clock metric, or the old English units of measure?
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Oh, how you DO babble-on!
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The Sumerians gave us the number "base-like" system that is used in time, but the actual units of hours and seconds that we use didn't come until much later. The Babylonians for example divided the day into 6 top-level units and then down from there.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S... [wikipedia.org]
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metric time [wikipedia.org]
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this is a clock, with uncertainty at both the front and back. therefore, it could be a front-door for the NSA.
and if its a quantum clock, it could be both (or neither) at the same time!
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How, exactly, do we know? (Score:2)
What do we have to reference it against, and isn't it arbitrarily exactly correct?
How the hell would we know if it was wrong?
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Re:Mod parent up (Score:4, Informative)
No, the weight of a kilogram is completely arbitrary. They are trying to fix it to something but right now it is just a weight.
A atomic clock works by counting the vibrations in an atom. The atomic clock fails when it miscounts the vibration of an atom, causing the error. The new clock is so good at counting that errors rarely occur.
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Kilograms are a MASS
No, they are pretty neat actually.
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Errors are not caused by "miscounting," but due to the fact that no physical realization can be perfect. The second is defined under the conditions of zero acceleration (i.e. no gravity) and at a temperature of absolute zero, neither of which are attainable in practice.
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In short, "counting vibrations" is a poor description of what's going on. In the case of a caesium fountain, what you're doing is driving a resonant transition in the atom with external microwaves. When the microwaves are tuned to the transition, the Cs atom changes its state, which can be detected. To make the microwaves, you usually start with something like a very good 5 MHz crystal oscillator and multiply it up (plus add an offset, also derived from the crystal) to get the transition frequency ( for the
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Because of this, actual time can only be known after the fact, because post-processing is needed.
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I dunno, it rather seemed politely redundant to me. Not threatening at all.
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Sadly, AC or not, I would have modded this up if only my mod points hadn't disappeared today.
rgb (and don't call me Surly...)
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The accuracy referred to is the measurement uncertainty of the instrument. Imagine you built ten of these clocks, and put them in adjacent rooms. The accuracy can be considered to be the mean drift between the clocks over time.
This is an over-simplification, because it is infact measured by comparing the clock to other atomic clocks distributed across the world, each of which is adjusted by taking known relativistic effects and other biases into consideration, and they are non-linearly averaged to create UT
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Atomic clocks work by counting the vibrations of atoms. We can determine how good the clock is at counting the vibrations, and from that calculate how much error it will see over time. It's done with statistics, i.e. how likely the clock is to miss a vibration.
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Not sure if the parent is simply being funny, but ... ...
No atomic clock is ever 'reset' because of leap seconds. All they produce is a one-pulse-per-second 'tick'. The labels on those ticks are completely arbitrary. When a leap second occurs, you just change the labels
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Comment removed (Score:4, Interesting)
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It is, actually, possible to measure such things.
Consider GPS, which relies on the accuracy of atomic clocks in orbit. Each GPS satellite has its own independent clock, which must be accurate to within about 40 billionths of a second, over the life of the satellite. http://gpsinformation.net/main... [gpsinformation.net] If the accuracy of one of the satellites' clocks is greater than that threshold, your GPS unit will incorrectly report your location. The accuracy of GPS coordinates is one way to calculate the accuracy of t
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So... (Score:3, Insightful)
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I want to know that same thing, but for the cluster of ntpd servers running on my LAN.
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I want to know that same thing, but for the cluster of ntpd servers running on my LAN.
I'd help you but you didn't specify you were running a Beowulf cluster.
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The receiver might cost $60 an antenna suitable for permanent outdoor installation might cost the same, but running cable to the roof, assuming that's possible, could easily cost a few thousand dollars to do properly. You'll want lightning protection too, if you're running the antenna cable down in to your server racks.
But for nearly everyone, as others point out, the 10 ms or so accuracy you will get from a nearby NTP server, is more than enough.
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It's dark outside.
It's night.
This wouldn't help me get to bed earlier anyway so why bother. (~04:42 local time as if it matters.)
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In Windows 7, go to 'Change Date & Time settings', click on the 'Internet Time' tab, then 'Change settings', and in the text box, where you normally see 'time.windows.com', you can change it to 'time.nist.gov'.
For any of the unixes, I'm guessing you'd have to edit some file in /etc to get that going.
so the new clock is 3x as accurate as the old one? (Score:5, Funny)
Well, it's important to me to be accurate within one second every three hundred million years!
Not sure how I'd manage if my time was only accurate to one second in ONE hundred million years....
Re:so the new clock is 3x as accurate as the old o (Score:4, Informative)
NIST has vastly more accurate clocks - so I don't see what the big deal is.
http://www.nist.gov/pml/div688... [nist.gov]
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The higher-accuracy clocks are not based on Cesium, which is a necessary basis for Standards Compliance. As I understand it, the F3 clock (from the article) is a "Cesium-fountain" atomic clock and is therefore suitable for use in standards-based calculations. The clock(s) referenced in that article, on the other hand, are Mercury and Aluminum based and therefore cannot be referenced according to SI standards.. The SI governing body would have to change their standard for the other clocks to be considered,
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Would someone tell me how this happened? We were the fucking vanguard of timekeeping industry in this country. The Naval Institute was the time to keep. Then the other guy came out with accuracy of 1 part per few billion. Were we scared? Hell, no. Because we hit back with a little thing called the Atomic fucking clock. That's A for both atomic and an aloe strip. For moisture. But you know what happened next? Shut up, I'm telling you what happened—the bastards went to went all nuclear on us. They've in
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http://youtu.be/K00rz73s_zU [youtu.be]
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Still waiting for the rice grain sized Atom Clocks (Score:1)
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....drones to airdrop missiles or fast food on my front door.
Hence the term "gut bombs".
300 million years (Score:2)
" it will lose or gain only one second every 300 million years"
Will it keep going for that long?
Whats the point of time that accurate, when its going to be + or - an hoir every six months
Re:300 million years (Score:4, Insightful)
All that accuracy... (Score:2)
gravitational time dialation (Score:5, Informative)
I met a guy that used to work at NIST that mentioned that their clocks are so sensitive, they can tell what floor the atomic clocks are on because of of the slightly different gravitational potential each clock experiences. I wonder what kind of resolution the can resolve. Can a very massive bolder throw off the clock a little? ..perhaps one day we will have to keep better track of the local gravitational potential well. It's possible to measure the gravitational constant with simple apparatus at home. Using two massive bodies in a torsion pendulum arrangement, you can estimate "big G" --
http://www.owlnet.rice.edu/~do... [rice.edu]
Here is an wikipedia article that mentions the phenomena with atomic clocks: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/G... [wikipedia.org]
A man with one atomic clock knows what time it is. (Score:5, Funny)
A man with two atomic clocks is never sure.
will XP still work with this New Clock? (Score:2)
Wise Man Says (Score:2)
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man with 2 atomic clocks is a foolish man; the same money could be spent on a gps receiver that disciplines the atomic clock.
(yes, I'm actually serious)
in development for about a decade? (Score:1)
I feel like my brain has whiplash reading about these differences in time precision.
Have to remember... (Score:2)
laptop hp (Score:1)
Can't trust that clock. (Score:2)
posterity (Score:3)
it will lose or gain only one second every 300 million years
Can't they just leave a note to the future people to click it forward/back at the right time?
If the clock in question supports 9-digit years, they could even set an alarm...
Heh (Score:2)
Well, the 300 million years is just an estimate and it could go either forward or backward. I guess they could build a yet more accurate clock to use as a reference... :P
Well... (Score:1)
Three times more accurate (Score:2)
This may seem redundant to you. But you'll change your tune in 100 million years when the old clock is already a second out of sync while the new one is still within 0.33s.
Finally... (Score:2)
...I won't be late for meetings anymore.
Just great. (Score:2)
The institute will continue operating both clocks for now at its campus in Boulder, Colorado.
A man with one atomic clock knows the time, a man with two is never sure - every 300 million years or so, sigh.
And how do you start it? (Score:2)
I guess its not easy to sync it with the existing ones. NTP will not do the job ;).
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You can sync it with existing clocks to an accuracy of perhaps 500 picoseconds using well-established techniques like GPS-carrier phase and Two-way Satellite Time-Transfer.
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hmm, and the new one with the new error is then the new reference? Not that it really matters ...
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Typically, there is no single clock that is "the reference". The international time standard, UTC, is an average of about 400 or so atomic clocks from all around the world. There are a number of caesium fountains currently contributing to UTC. Even in a single laboratory, where there a number of clocks, these clocks will usually be averaged and one clock then adjusted to keep to this average. There are various practical reasons for this. If you have a number of similar clocks, the average will have a more s
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But isn't averaging even more unstable than syncing with one clock? And in any case, this one will be more precise than the average and every single other one.
Time is an illusion (Score:1)
60HZ Reference (Score:1)
Calibration? (Score:2)
Will they be bringing Johnny Marr in to calibrate it?
no boulderites protesting "radioactive" clock? (Score:2)
Slashdot version (Score:2)
So... is there a technical explanation with diagrams that shows how this new clock works?