|
The following article originally linked to the BBC website. That
material is no longer available but, luckily, much of the pages'
static content has been stored by the Internet Archive "Wayback
Machine" and the links now refer there. However, the videos
are not available.
Keeping Time with Atoms
A very precise clock is needed to demonstrate
Einstein's relativity theory concerning space and time. Agilent
Technologies' 5071A Primary Frequency Standard is widely acknowledged
by the world's timekeeping experts as the best commercially available
device; an atomic clock that, in laboratory conditions, has
stability equivalent to one second in 1.6 million years (2x10^-14
) and with typical absolute timekeeping accuracy of about one second
in 160 thousand years
(2x10^-13 ) but conservatively specified at 1x10^-12.
This extraordinary precision makes it ideally
suited to the "flying clock" experiment that formed part
of the 1999 series of British Royal Institution Christmas Lectures
televised by the BBC. The annual lectures aim to introduce science
to children in a fun way and their website provides an excellent
supporting resource to the series. Using
the free RealPlayer , you can watch video extracts showing
this experiment that illustrates the possibility of time travel.
The Experiment in Summary
Two 5071A standards are used which are time
synchronized and whose relative rates of change are known. One is
designated as the reference whilst the other is taken to China and
back. When the two clocks are reunited it is seen, even after the
different drift rates of each clock is taken into account,
that the traveling clock has lost about 60 nanoseconds compared
to the clock that remained in Britain.
Streaming RealVideo from BBC Online
NOTE: Unfortunately, the videos are no longer
available from the BBC or the Internet Archive.
Dr John Laverty of the UK National Physical
Laboratory wrote an article for the BBC about the experiment.
He also anticipated
its conclusion with a mathematical explanation for the loss of time
suffered by the "flying clock". A
similar discussion is also published in our Application Note 1289.
To view, your browser must have Acrobat installed.
Where Else are Atomic Clocks Used?
Atomic clocks play a vital role in modern
life, synchronizing the rapid movement of information through communications
networks. The more accurate these systems' timing references are,
the greater the amount of information that can be transferred without
the danger of lost data. That means clear telephone calls, sharp
television pictures and fast, error-free Internet connections. They're
also the foundation of satellite-based navigation systems, found
everywhere these days from yachts to space shuttles and even hikers'
rucksacks, where the accuracy of the reference clocks directly relate
to the receiver's ability to establish its latitude, longitude and
altitude to an accuracy of a few metres.
How Long is a Second?
The principals of a caesium beam frequency
standard were first demonstrated by the UK's National Physical Laboratory
in 1955 and in 1964 Agilent Technologies (as HP) introduced the
first commercially available product. In 1967 the second was internationally
agreed as the duration of 9,192,631,770 vibrations of the caesium-133
atom. The International Bureau of the Hour in France maintains International
Atomic Time by calculating a weighted average from the performance
of several hundred atomic clocks operating in many countries. Agilent
caesium clocks contribute 80% of this figure and, consequently,
virtually define the length of the world's standard second.
How Does it Work?
Around 1913, the young Danish physicist
Niels Bohr, working in England with Ernest Rutherford, developed
the original concept of atoms comprising a central nucleus with
orbiting electrons, like planets circling the sun. Bohr proposed
the revolutionary idea that the electrons did not gain or lose energy
in a gradual way like a spring winding down, but did so in lumps
by jumping between distinct, allowable orbits. He also realized
that the orbital change is accompanied by the release or absorption
of a distinct "quantum" of energy and that this corresponds
to a particular frequency of electromagnetic radiation.
The caesium atom has a single, outermost
valence electron that spins on its axis. This spin produces a magnetic
field at the center of the atom called the hyperfine field. The
nucleus, which is itself spinning like a magnet, aligns itself in
the hyperfine field in a direction that depends on the energy state
of the atom. In one energy state the nucleus and the hyperfine field
are aligned in the same direction, while in the other state the
two are opposed. By arranging for a beam of caesium atoms to pass
through a microwave energy field, the atoms can be made to change
states either absorbing or emitting energy as the microwave frequency
is varied. When the frequency precisely equals the hyperfine resonance
of the atom, the greatest number of transitions will occur. This
peak activity is detected and used to control the frequency of the
microwave field which is, therefore, accurately held at the atom's
resonance of about nine billion beats per second. With the addition
of digital divider circuitry, an exact one second pulse is derived.
|