(Press-News.org) BOULDER, Colo. -- In another advance at the far
frontiers of timekeeping by National Institute of
Standards and Technology (NIST) researchers, the
latest modification of a record-setting strontium atomic
clock has achieved precision and stability levels that
now mean the clock would neither gain nor lose one
second in some 15 billion years*--roughly the age of
the universe.
Precision timekeeping has broad potential
impacts on advanced communications, positioning technologies (such as GPS) and many
other technologies. Besides keeping future technologies on schedule, the clock has
potential applications that go well beyond simply marking time. Examples include a
sensitive altimeter based on changes in gravity and experiments that explore quantum
correlations between atoms.
As described in Nature Communications,** the experimental strontium lattice clock
at JILA, a joint institute of NIST and the University of Colorado Boulder, is now more than
three times as precise as it was last year, when it set the previous world record.***
Precision refers to how closely the clock approaches the true resonant frequency at which
the strontium atoms oscillate between two electronic energy levels. The clock's stability--
how closely each tick matches every other tick--also has been improved by almost 50
percent, another world record.
The JILA clock is now good enough to measure tiny changes in the passage of time
and the force of gravity at slightly different heights. Einstein predicted these effects in his
theories of relativity, which mean, among other things, that clocks tick faster at higher
elevations. Many scientists have demonstrated this, but with less sensitive techniques.****
"Our performance means that we can measure the gravitational shift when you raise
the clock just 2 centimeters on the Earth's surface," JILA/NIST Fellow Jun Ye says. "I think
we are getting really close to being useful for relativistic geodesy."
Relativistic geodesy is the idea of using a network of clocks as gravity sensors to
make 3D precision measurements of the shape of the Earth. Ye agrees with other experts
that, when clocks can detect a gravitational shift at 1 centimeter differences in height--just
a tad better than current performance--they could be used to achieve more frequent
geodetic updates than are possible with conventional technologies such as tidal gauges
and gravimeters.
In the JILA/NIST clock, a few thousand atoms of strontium are held in a 30-by-30
micrometer column of about 400 pancake-shaped regions formed by intense laser light
called an optical lattice. JILA and NIST scientists detect strontium's "ticks" (430 trillion per
second) by bathing the atoms in very stable red laser light at the exact frequency that
prompts the switch between energy levels.
The JILA group made the latest improvements with the help of researchers at
NIST's Maryland headquarters and the Joint Quantum Institute (JQI). Those researchers
contributed improved measurements and calculations to reduce clock errors related to
heat from the surrounding environment, called blackbody radiation. The electric field
associated with the blackbody radiation alters the atoms' response to laser light, adding
uncertainty to the measurement if not controlled.
To help measure and maintain the atoms' thermal environment, NIST's Wes Tew
and Greg Strouse calibrated two platinum resistance thermometers, which were then
installed in the clock's vacuum chamber in Colorado. Researchers also built a radiation
shield to surround the atom chamber, which allowed clock operation at room temperature
rather than much colder, cryogenic temperatures.
"The clock operates at normal room temperature," Ye notes. "This is actually one of
the strongest points of our approach, in that we can operate the clock in a simple and
normal configuration while keeping the blackbody radiation shift uncertainty at a minimum."
In addition, JQI theorist Marianna Safronova used the quantum theory of atomic
structure to calculate the frequency shift due to blackbody radiation, enabling the JILA
team to better correct for the error.
Overall, the clock's improved performance tracks NIST scientists' expectations for
this area of research, as described in "A New Era in Atomic Clocks" at
http://www.nist.gov/pml/div688/2013_1_17_newera_atomicclocks.cfm.
INFORMATION:
The JILA research is
supported by NIST, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency and the National
Science Foundation.
* For the general public, NIST converts an atomic clock's systematic or fractional total uncertainty to an error expressed
as 1 second accumulated over a certain minimum length of time. That is calculated by dividing 1 by the clock's
systematic uncertainty, and then dividing that result by the number of seconds in a year (31.5 million) to find the
approximate minimum number of years it would take to accumulate 1 full second of error. The JILA clock has reached a
higher level of precision (smaller uncertainty) than any other clock.
** T.L. Nicholson, S.L. Campbell, R.B. Hutson, G.E. Marti, B.J. Bloom, R.L. McNally, W. Zhang, M.D. Barrett, M.S.
Safronova, G.F. Strouse, W.L. Tew and J. Ye. 2015. Nature Communications. Systematic evaluation of an atomic clock
at 2 × 10-18 total uncertainty. April 21.
*** See 2014 NIST Tech Beat article, "JILA Strontium Atomic Clock Sets New Records in Both Precision and Stability," at
http://www.nist.gov/pml/div689/20140122_strontium.cfm.
**** Another NIST group demonstrated this effect by raising the quantum logic clock, based on a single aluminum ion,
about 1 foot. See 2010 NIST news release, "NIST Pair of Aluminum Atomic Clocks Reveal Einstein's Relativity at a
Personal Scale," at http://www.nist.gov/public_affairs/releases/aluminum-atomic-clock_092310.cfm.
Scientists from the DFG Center for Regenerative Therapies Dresden, TU Dresden and the Institut für Diabetesforschung, Helmholtz Zentrum München, together with researchers from Vienna, Bristol and Denver (USA) have successfully completed the first step in development of an insulin vaccine to prevent type 1 diabetes.
As reported by these diabetes researchers in the current edition of the renowned scientific journal JAMA, evaluations of the international Pre-POINT study point to a positive immune response in persons at risk for the disease who were given oral doses ...
AURORA, Colo. (April 21, 2015) - The incidence of a potentially life-threatening complication of diabetes, called diabetic ketoacidosis, increased by 55 percent between 1998 and 2012 in youth in Colorado, according to a study by researchers from the Barbara Davis Center for Childhood Diabetes and the University of Colorado School of Medicine on the Anschutz Medical Campus.
The finding is published in the April 21 issue of JAMA.
Diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) at the time of type 1 diabetes diagnosis has detrimental long-term effects and is characterized by dangerously high ...
AURORA, Colo. (April 21, 2015) - Children at risk for type 1 diabetes, who were given daily doses of oral insulin, developed a protective immune response to the disease that researchers with the Barbara Davis Center for Childhood Diabetes at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus say could possibly lay the groundwork for a vaccine against the chronic illness.
The pilot study, published Tuesday, April 21, in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA), was carried out in the U.S., Germany, Austria and the United Kingdom.
"This is the first time ...
Sweet potatoes from all over the world naturally contain genes from the bacterium Agrobacterium. Researchers from UGent and the International Potato Institute publish this discovery in PNAS. Sweet potato is one of the most important food crops for human consumption in the world. Because of the presence of this 'foreign' DNA, sweet potato can be seen as a 'natural GMO.'
The researchers discovered the foreign DNA sequences of Agrobacterium while searching the genome - this is the entire DNA-code - of sweet potato for viral diseases. Instead of contributing this peculiar ...
Female liver cells, and in particular those in menopaused women, are more susceptible to adverse effects of drugs than their male counterparts, according to new research carried out by the JRC. It is well known that women are more vulnerable when it comes to drug-induced liver effects, but it's the first time it has been shown that there are differences at cellular level. The findings are striking and clinically relevant, and emphasise the importance of considering sex-based differences in human health risk assessment.
In this study, five prevalently used drugs (diclofenac, ...
WORCESTER, MA -- In a promising breakthrough for smokers who are trying to quit, neuroscientists at the University of Massachusetts Medical School and The Scripps Research Institute have identified circuitry in the brain responsible for the increased anxiety commonly experienced during withdrawal from nicotine addiction.
"We identified a novel circuit in the brain that becomes active during nicotine withdrawal, specifically increasing anxiety," said principal investigator Andrew Tapper, PhD , associate professor of psychiatry. "Increased anxiety is a prominent nicotine ...
Before web developers add the newest bells and the latest whistles to their website designs, a team of researchers suggests they zoom in on the tools that click with the right users and for the right tasks.
"When designers create sites, they have to make decisions on what tools and features they use and where they put them, which takes a lot of planning," said S. Shyam Sundar, Distinguished Professor of Communications and co-director of the Media Effects Research Laboratory. "You not only have to plan where the feature will be, you also have to design what will go underneath ...
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. -- MIT physicists have developed a new tabletop particle detector that is able to identify single electrons in a radioactive gas.
As the gas decays and gives off electrons, the detector uses a magnet to trap them in a magnetic bottle. A radio antenna then picks up very weak signals emitted by the electrons, which can be used to map the electrons' precise activity over several milliseconds.
The team worked with researchers at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, the University of Washington, the University of California at Santa Barbara (UCSB), and ...
DURHAM, N.C. - A new study based on 1,000 years of temperature records suggests global warming is not progressing as fast as it would under the most severe emissions scenarios outlined by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).
"Based on our analysis, a middle-of-the-road warming scenario is more likely, at least for now," said Patrick T. Brown, a doctoral student in climatology at Duke University's Nicholas School of the Environment. "But this could change."
The Duke-led study shows that natural variability in surface temperatures -- caused by interactions ...
The study conducted at Sant Pau and Bellvitge hospitals, published in the American journal Molecular Psychiatry and conducted with the use of neuroimaging techniques, demonstrates for the first time that cannabis consumers have a less active hippocampus, a key structure related to the storage of memories.
Consumers of cannabis show distortions in their memories and can even come to imagine situations which differ from reality.
The study compared the memories of consumers to that of non-consumers to find differences in the retention of situations and experiences.
The ...