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atomic clock
(redirected from Cesium clock)

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atomic clock

Timekeeping device regulated by various periodic processes occurring in atoms and molecules, such as atomic vibration or the frequency of absorbed or emitted radiation.

The first atomic clock was the ammonia clock, invented at the US National Bureau of Standards in 1948. It was regulated by measuring the speed at which the nitrogen atom in an ammonia molecule vibrated back and forth. The rate of molecular vibration is not affected by temperature, pressure, or other external influences, and can be used to regulate an electronic clock.

A more accurate atomic clock is the caesium clock. Because of its internal structure, a caesium atom produces or absorbs radiation of a very precise frequency (9,192,631,770 Hz) that varies by less than one part in 10 billion. This frequency has been used to define the second, and is the basis of atomic clocks used in international timekeeping.

Hydrogen maser clocks, based on the radiation from hydrogen atoms, are the most accurate. The hydrogen maser clock at the US Naval Research Laboratory, Washington, DC, is estimated to lose one second in 1,700,000 years. Cooled hydrogen maser clocks could theoretically be accurate to within one second in 300 million years.

Atomic clocks are so accurate that minute adjustments must be made periodically to the length of the year to keep the calendar exactly synchronized with the Earth's rotation, which has a tendency to slow down. There have been 17 adjustments made since 1972 adding a total of 20 seconds to the calendar. In 1997 the northern hemisphere's summer was longer than usual – by one second. An extra second was added to the world's time at precisely 23 hours, 59 minutes, and 60 seconds on 30 June 1997. The adjustment was called for by the International Earth Rotation Service in Paris, which monitors the difference between Earth time and atomic time.



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? Mentioned in ? References in periodicals archive
 
To track time, a cesium clock exploits the absorption of microwaves by a cloud of cesium atoms (SN: 9/4/04, p.
In this collaborative program, involving NIST, JPL, the University of Colorado, and the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, a laser-cooled cesium clock will be put aboard the International Space Station in 2005 to perform certain tests on gravitational theory and to improve upon the realization of the second.
The new system uses laser cooling to increase the interaction time 100 to 1000 times greater than a conventional cesium clock.
 
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