An atomic clock is a clock that uses an electronic transition frequency in the microwave, optical, or ultraviolet region of theelectromagnetic spectrum of atoms as a frequency standard for its timekeeping element. Atomic
clocks are the most accurate time and frequency standards known, and are used as primary
standards for
international time distribution services, to control the wave
frequency of television broadcasts, and in global navigation satellite systems such as GPS. The principle of
operation of an atomic clock is not based on nuclear
physics, but rather on atomic
physics and using themicrowave signal that electrons in atoms emit when they change energy levels.
10. Atomic clocks have changed how we calculate common units of time.
Back when humans began to track the passage of time thousands of
years ago, they did it by watching the apparent movement of the sun across the
sky -- which actually was due to the Earth's
rotation -- and basing
units of time on that journey. Traditionally, for example, a second was defined
as 1/86,400 of the average length of a solar day.
But with the advent of atomic clocks,
which were far more reliable than the motion of the Earth itself, it became
necessary to change that standard. In 1967, the second was redefined as the
time that it took for an atom of the isotope cesium 133 to oscillate
9,192,631,770 cycles [source: Sciencemuseum.org.uk].
9. An atomic clock uses a single electron from each cesium atom to keep
time.
As we explained previously, electrons orbit the center of an atom, which is called the
nucleus. Imagine an extremely tiny version of our solar system, with planets
revolving around the sun, and you'll get the general idea. Physicists have
discovered that electrons are amazingly regular in their movements -- they tend
to remain within a narrow range of orbits, with the distance from the nucleus
determined by how much radiation they're emitting at a given moment. The
distance between the lowest orbit and the highest orbit that an electron moves
in is the frequency.
In the case of cesium, which is used in atomic clocks,
scientists focus on just one of the element's 55 electrons -- the outermost
one, which occupies an orbit that's conspicuously higher than the rest. The
difference in energy between the outermost electron's closest orbit to the
nucleus and its farthest orbit corresponds to a radio frequency of
9,192,631,770 cycles. That's the part that scientists actually use to calculate
time and break it into incredibly brief units of less than a billionth of a
second [source:Sciencemuseum.org.uk].
8. Atomic clocks are incredibly reliable now, but the first ones weren't.
In 1948, the U.S. National Bureau of Standards built the world's
first atomic clock.
Instead of cesium, the first clock used ammonia atoms, which were heated and
shot out of a copper pipe. While the first clock proved that the concept of
atomic clocks worked, it was never actually used for time keeping. The first
atomic clock was off by about one second every four months. That made it less
reliable than an existing technology, the quartz clock,
which measured the oscillation of a piece of quartz when an electrical charge
was applied to it.
Eventually, the scientists switched to using cesium, which had
shorter oscillations, and improved the design in various ways. A 1959 model
managed to keep time with an error of one second per 2,000 years, and by 1964,
the clocks had become so precise that it took 6,000 years for them to lose or
gain a second. Today a state-of-the-art atomic clock would be off by just one
second after 6 million years of use [source:Sciencemuseum.org.uk].
7. Cesium, the stuff used in atomic clocks, is kind of an oddball
element.
For starters, it's sometimes spelled "caesium." Cesium
was discovered in 1860 by Robert Bunsen, better known to high school chemistry
students as the inventor of the Bunsen burner. And it's such strangely
fascinating stuff that in the early 1990s it inspired the creation of an
Internet newsgroup, Alt.cesium, which was devoted to "discussion, praise,
veneration, and adoration, the posting of songs, poetry, stories, and parables
of and about that most sublime of elements" [source: Nelson].
Commonly known as "the other golden metal," it's one of only three
metals that aren't gray or shiny silver in color (the other two are gold and
copper) [source: Scientific
American].
The type of cesium found in nature, cesium 133, is pretty
difficult to locate. The natural source that yields the greatest quantity of it
is a rare mineral called pollucite, which in the U.S. is found in ore from
Maine and South Dakota. Though it's a metal, cesium melts at a really low
temperature -- 82 degrees Fahrenheit (22.7 degrees Celsius) -- and explodes
when it comes in contact with cold water [source: Argonne National Laboratory].
In air, it sometimes catches fire spontaneously, burning with a brilliant
sky-blue flame [source:Nelson].
6. An atomic clock actually uses a hunk of quartz, not a cesium atom, to
tell time.
You're probably a bit puzzled by this, given that we've spent all
this time telling you how much more accurate an atomic clock is due to its use
of the oscillation of cesium. But the part of the clock
that actually keeps time is a standard quartz crystal oscillator, which
subjects a piece of the crystal to electrical current to make it vibrate. The
difference is that in most ordinary quartz clocks,
the oscillator is tuned accurately when the clock is built, but its frequency
is never checked or adjusted after that, which means that over time, slight
variations develop that make the clock a little fast or a little slow. In an
atomic clock, however, the oscillation of the cesium is used to check the
frequency of the quartz device, which is what gives the clock such amazing
accuracy [source: Sciencemuseum.org.uk].
5. In 2008, a second was added simultaneously to every atomic clock on
Earth.
Just before 7 p.m. on Dec. 31, 2008, scientists wound theatomic clocks around the world ahead exactly one
second, in order to synchronize Coordinated Universal Time (UTC), the
international standard for atomic clocks, with the Earth's rotation. It wasn't
the clocks that were off, but rather the planet, whose rotational speed is
slowed down about two milliseconds each day by a variety of brakes: space dust,
magnetic storms, solar winds, resistance from its own atmosphere, and most
importantly, the tug of the moon's gravity on Earth,
which not only causes ocean tides, but also makes the entire planet bulge.
The effect of all that is to lengthen the solar day, and throw it
ever so slightly off in comparison to our super-accurate atomic clocks. It
would take hundreds of years for the discrepancy to become noticeable, so that
the position of the sun in the sky would be different from the time on a house
clock, (which you've probably set according to the correct time phone number,
which is based on the UTC). To prevent that from ever happening, in 1972, an
international agreement decreed that atomic clocks periodically would be
adjusted in unison [source: Dowling].
4. An atomic clock was used to prove that the higher you live above sea
level, the faster you age.
The idea that someone who lives on a mountain ages faster than a
person who lives on the beach may seem a little preposterous, but it's actually
the truth. This concept was first advanced about a century ago by physicist Albert
Einstein, whose theory of special relativity postulated that time is
not constant, but relative. (That's why they call it relativity.) In 2010,
James Chin-Wen Chou and colleagues from the National Institute of Standards and
Technology (NIST) conducted an experiment to test Einstein's reasoning. They
positioned two atomic clocks about 30 centimeters apart above sea
level, and found that the higher of the two clocks ran slightly faster. In real
terms, though, the difference wouldn't be noticeable; the mountain dweller
would age about 90 billionths of a second faster over a 79-year lifetime,
according to Chou [source:Connor].
3. Scientists make atomic clocks more accurate by using laser beams.
If you've ever seen that scene in the movie "Goldfinger"
during which the villain threatens to slice James Bond in half with a laser, you're probably
wondering why a laser wouldn't burn a hole through an atomic clock, instead of
making it run more precisely. But it actually can do the latter. Bear with us
because this gets pretty complicated.
Atomic clocks essentially bombard cesium atoms with microwaves to
stir up some action, which scientists can then measure. The limitation of
conventional atomic clocks has been that they can only catch a small portion of
the cesium atoms with the microwave. By subjecting the atoms to alaser beam -- a process called laser optical
pumping -- you can slow down the atoms' speed, which gives the microwaves more
chance to hit them. That, in turn, makes for a more precise signal, which
enables scientists to use the cesium oscillation to mark off time even more
accurately. Oddly, the process also cools down the cesium atoms, right down to
a few millionths of a degree above absolute zero on the Kelvin Scale [source: Buell and
Jaduszliwer].
2. Atomic clocks make your phone conversations comprehensible.
These days, telecom companies transmit phone calls in bits and
pieces called packets,
which enables them to pump a vast number of conversations through their wires
at the same time. When you call someone in another city, your words are broken
up and transmitted between computers at each end, which flick back and forth between
one conversation and another, thousands of times every second. For that to
work, however, the two computers have to stay in perfect sync, like a pair of
incredibly nimble ping pong players who can hit the equivalent of a truckload
of little balls at each other at blazing speed and never miss even one. If they
do miss, the calls will get jumbled and sound like gibberish. That's why
telecom companies these days have their own atomic clocks to prevent this from
happening, by keeping the computers almost perfectly in step with one another
at all times [source: Sciencemuseum.org.uk].
1. A next-generation atomic clock may be able to keep perfect time with
the universe.
Scientists keep dreaming up ways to make atomic clocks
more and more accurate, but researchers at the Georgia Institute of Technology
and the University of Nevada recently proposed a truly mind-blowing advance. In
vastly oversimplified terms, here's the deal: They want to use lasers to
rearrange the pieces of an atom, so that they can use an orbiting neutron,
rather than an electron, as the equivalent of a pendulum.
The result might be a clock that would be 100 times more accurate than any now
in existence, so precise that it would only lose or gain less than
one-twentieth of a second in 14 billion years. Consider this: The universe
itself is roughly 14 billion years old, so if this clock somehow could be sent
back in a time machine to the moment of the big bang that started everything,
it would still be ticking along today, in virtually perfect step with every
moment that has ever occurred [source: Science Daily].
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