The article below talks about a new clock being more "precise,"
but everything in it refers to a smaller "tick" interval. What
use is a finer tick interval if its fundamental accuracy is no
better, or perhaps even worse?

Jim

http://dailynews.yahoo.com/h/nm/20010712/tc/science_clock_dc_1.ht
ml


U.S. Scientists Create World's Most Precise Clock
Photos


By Will Dunham

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Using sophisticated laser technology and a
lone atom of mercury, U.S. government scientists have created the
world's most precise clock -- a device that ticktocks circles
around the best previous timepieces, according to research
published on Thursday.

Scientists at the National Institute of Standards and Technology
(NIST) in Boulder, Colorado, developed a new type of atomic clock
that produces about 1 quadrillion ``ticks'' per second and
promises to be far more accurate than the current top standard in
time measurement -- cesium-based microwave atomic clocks.

``We've demonstrated for the first time the next generation of
atomic clocks, which have the potential to be 100 to 1,000 times
more accurate than the current cesium-based microwave clocks,''
physicist Scott Diddams, who led the research appearing in the
journal Science, said in an interview.

The new all-optical atomic clock -- so named because of its
reliance on laser technology -- measures the shortest intervals
of time ever recorded. In fact, those intervals are 100,000 times
shorter than those observed by the best current clocks.

The new atomic clock could improve navigation technology, as well
as communications technology such as cellular telephones and
fiber optics, Diddams said.

The new clock also may help provide answers to some exotic
scientific questions relating to Albert Einstein's theory of
general relativity and the plasticity of time, Diddams added.

``Some of those (issues) are related to the very idea that maybe
time is not constant as our universe evolves,'' he said.

All clocks since the sundial have consisted of two major
components: a device that produces a regular tick, such as a
pendulum; and some means to count, accumulate and display the
passage of time, such as gears driving a pair of clock hands.

Atomic clocks, first developed about 50 years ago, add a third
component -- an atom that responds to light or electromagnetic
radiation at very specific frequencies in order to control the
``pendulum.''

TIME REALLY FLIES

In the best current atomic clocks, the shining of microwave
radiation at a million atoms of the liquid metal cesium controls
the tick. These clocks tick about 10 billion times per second. A
clock with more ticks can be much more precise.

But the high-speed electronics technology used in the cesium
clocks was not equipped to count many more ticks.

``We needed a new clockwork,'' Diddams said.

The new atomic clock does not use cesium atoms, but rather a
single cooled ion of the liquid metal mercury (a mercury atom
with one electron stripped off) linked to a laser oscillator
functioning as a pendulum. The frequency of the mercury ion is
100,000 times higher than the frequency on the cesium atoms.

But by employing another laser to add, in effect, another wheel
to the gears, Diddams and his colleagues conjured up a way to
keep track of all the ticking.

Ultra-precise clocks have proven very useful. Satellites in the
global-positioning system used for navigation are equipped with
atomic clocks. The clocks are used in communications systems for
synchronizing networks. In fact, the electrical grid for the
United States is timed with atomic clocks.

Diddams said advances in timekeeping technology tend to spur
leaps forward in a lot of other fields. ``As clocks get better
and better, the applications that people dream up just keep
getting better and better,'' Diddams said.

He said he envisioned future uses for the new clock in regulating
precise orbits for satellites, deep-space navigation and linking
together spacecraft. ``You need very precise navigational tools
for this,'' Diddams added.

Diddams said the clock exists as components in two of his
agencies laboratories in Boulder. ``It's not neatly packaged up
in a box that says 'NIST All-Optical Clock.' An outsider would
have no idea that it was a clock. We don't have a display on it
that says 11 p.m. or whatever.''

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