Atomic Clock › (RECENT)

An atomic clock is the world’s most accurate timekeeping device. While a grandfather clock relies on a swinging pendulum and a digital watch relies on a vibrating quartz crystal, an atomic clock uses the ultra-stable vibrations of atoms—usually cesium or strontium—to measure the passage of time. How It Works

High-speed data transfers and cellular networks require perfectly synchronized "stamps" to ensure packets of data arrive in the correct order. Atomic Clock

Scientists use these clocks to detect tiny changes in gravity (General Relativity) and to search for dark matter. Precision Limits An atomic clock is the world’s most accurate

You likely interact with atomic clocks every day without realizing it: Scientists use these clocks to detect tiny changes

If the microwave frequency is exactly right, the atoms change states.

GPS satellites carry atomic clocks. Because radio signals travel at the speed of light, even a billionth of a second of error could result in your GPS being off by several miles.

Since 1967, the International System of Units (SI) has defined one second as exactly 9,192,631,770 oscillations of the radiation produced by this transition in a cesium-133 atom. Why It Matters

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