• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Record-Breaking Most Precise Clock Would Lose One Second In 40 Billion Years

March 29, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

Precision time-keeping has a new record. Researchers have created a clock with an uncertainty of about 8 parts per tenth of a billionth of a billionth. This level of precision is so incredibly small that it would take the clock slightly less than three times the age of the universe to lose a single second – 39.15 billion years to be exact.

The sun could live and die four times and this clock would still just lose a single second. The device is known as an optical lattice clock, described in a pre-print paper that has yet to undergo peer review, and uses 40,000 strontium atoms trapped in a one-dimensional lattice. The atoms are kept at just a fraction of a degree above absolute zero and the ticking of this clock is a transition between specific energy levels for the electrons in this atom.

Advertisement

The team has been developing optical atomic clocks for years already, reaching precision that is impossible with regular atomic clocks that use cesium atoms. Still, over the last several years, the team has progressed in constraining uncertainties and systematic effects to further improve the precision of this device.

“We’re playing a bunch of tricks to make it the most accurate clock we possibly can,” lead author Alexander Aeppli, from the University of Colorado Boulder, told New Scientist.

You might ask how more precise can you get than that. Well, the team thinks they can go even further. They hope to reach 10 times more precise measurements, and could maybe even reach levels 100 times more precise. They have been able to improve their precision by a factor of 10 in just a few years, so it seems that their confidence is well-placed.

These clocks are expected to bring forth a new definition of the second, no longer based on the best atomic clock but on one of these devices. But this is not the only scientific use for these devices – with incredible precision, discoveries well beyond time-keeping await.

Advertisement

“There will be very interesting discoveries that are waiting for us if we get to the times that are sensitive to the very small space-time curvature,” senior author Professor Jun Ye told IFLScience when it was announced he had won the 2022 Breakthrough Prize in Fundamental Physics.

Atomic clocks are already sensitive to relativistic effects, but the sensitivity of optical lattice clocks is 1,000 times higher which means that they can be used to measure gravity like never before as well as testing our theory of gravity – general relativity – to a more stringent limit. If this wasn’t already very cool, these clocks could be used to study dark matter.

A paper describing these results was published on Arxiv ahead of peer review.

[h/t: New Scientist]

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. U.S. banking lobby groups oppose proposed tax reporting law
  2. Video Shows Albert Einstein Explaining His Most Famous Equation
  3. Venus’s Thin And “Squishy” Crust May Be Answer To Heat-Loss Mystery
  4. Secret Service Agent At JFK Assassination Casts Doubt On Single Bullet Theory

Source Link: Record-Breaking Most Precise Clock Would Lose One Second In 40 Billion Years

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Hummingbirds Have Rapidly Evolved In California Over The Past Century
  • The Moon’s Mysterious Magnetic Rocks Might Have A Cataclysmic Explanation
  • The Earth’s Core Is Leaking. The Result: More Gold
  • Over 40 Percent Of Kids In A US Study Thought Bacon Was A Plant
  • Fossil Mystery Reveals New Species Of 85-Million-Year-Old Sea Monster, And It’s “Very Odd”
  • Can’t Handle The Heat? A Potential “Anti-Spice” Could Tame Spicy Food
  • We Now Know When Denisovans, Neanderthals, And Modern Humans Inhabited Denisova Cave
  • Tailless Alligator Shocks Passersby On Highway In Southern Louisiana
  • What Is Trump’s “Golden Dome” Missile System And How Would It Actually Work?
  • Geophagia – Why Some People Eat Soil, And Whether You Should Try It Too (Spoiler: No)
  • Rare Moonlit Night On Mars Captured By Perseverance
  • This Strange, Supergiant Amphipod Inhabits Up To 59 Percent Of The World’s Seabed
  • The Pineal Gland Is Mysterious, But It’s Probably Not A Psychic “Third Eye”
  • New Contact Lenses Give You Infrared Vision Even With Your Eyes Shut
  • Only 2 Species Of This “Living Fossil” Exist – And 1 Was Just Photographed In The Wild For The First Time
  • New Sun Images At 8K Resolution Show Astounding, Never-Before-Seen Details
  • Why Do Ostriches Have Four Kneecaps If They Only Have Two Legs?
  • Toad In The Hole: The Myth And Mystery Of The Living Frogs Entombed In Rocks
  • Newest Member Of The Solar System Just Announced – And It’s In An Extreme Orbit
  • Meet Walckenaer’s Studded Triangular Spider And The Rest Of Its Triangular Family
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version