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abdulhakeem
17-02-08, 06:17 PM
Sunday February 17, 2008

US physicists have made a clock so accurate it will neither gain nor lose even a second in more than 200 million years, a finding sure to please even the most punctually minded.

The clock, described in the journal Science, outperforms the official atomic clock used by the US Commerce Department's National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), which promises to keep accurate time down to the second for 80 million years.

The new atomic clock is vying for the title of world's most accurate with another experimental clock developed in the same lab at the Joint Institute for Laboratory Astrophysics, a collaboration between NIST and the University of Colorado in Boulder.

"These clocks are improving so rapidly that it is impossible to tell which one will be the best," said Tom O'Brian, head of the Time and Frequency Division at NIST.

Such highly precise clocks are critical for deep space navigation, where even a slight error can make or break a space mission.

The secret to making an extremely accurate clock is speeding up how fast it ticks. "If you make a mistake, you can know about that mistake very fast," said Jun Ye, who developed the atomic clock at JILA.

Ye's clock has 430 trillion "ticks" per second.

Its pendulum uses thousands of strontium atoms suspended in grids of laser light. This allows the researchers to trap the atoms and measure the movement of energy inside.

"Essentially, we are probing the energy structure of the atom. We are probing how electrons make transitions between a set of energy levels," Ye said in a telephone interview.

"This is the time scale that was made by the universe. It is very stable."

To test the accuracy of his clock, Ye and colleagues compared it with another optical atomic clock - this one measuring calcium atoms. This calcium clock is highly stable over only short periods of time, so the researchers had to make fast measurements for their comparisons.

Next Ye wants to take on a clock that measures a single ion, or charged particle, of mercury. This clock, also developed at JILA, was accurate to about 1 second in 400 million years in 2006. Because Ye's clock measures thousands of atoms at once, it produces stronger signals, something Ye thinks may give him an edge.

"These clocks are among the best in the world," John Lowe, leader of the atomic standards group at NIST, said in a telephone interview. "Longer-term experiments will prove which of these clocks may end up becoming the next standard of international agreement."

Ye said pushing for ever more accurate clocks will allow physicists to test some of the basic questions about the nature of the universe.

It also can be used to synchronise telecommunications networks and might someday lead to things such as hands-free driving in satellite-guided cars.

"If we can navigate a vehicle on Mars and ask it to settle down on a particular runway, I'm sure we can navigate all the cars on earth with satellites," Ye said.

http://nz.news.yahoo.com/080217/9/40zd.html

Russo
17-02-08, 11:38 PM
How much do they pay these idiots? What good is this to mankind and the poverty and violence that prevails in our communities?

Joha
18-02-08, 06:03 AM
How much do they pay these idiots? What good is this to mankind and the poverty and violence that prevails in our communities?

Those 'idiots' have helped man, I'm willing to bet, more than you have. One of the biggest tools against poverty is technology.

Have you ever been on a plane? Have you ever used a car with GPS navigation? None of that would be possible if we didn't have extremely accurate timing devices.

More to the point, what have you done for mankind?

vorsprung
18-02-08, 08:09 AM
everyone should have their place in society. What they'r doing, will in turn benefit several other industries.

All jobs, no matter how mundane it may be, serve some purpose 'for the greater good'

As muslims, we too, should work to improve our societies & advance ourselves, and at the same time, work on our soul and improve our imaan.

Russo
18-02-08, 04:45 PM
I pay Zakah on a regular basis.

I pay extra for charitable purposes.

I left my 35K a year job to work for £12k a year in a clinic for old people.

Now tell me, what have you done for mankind...! Dont bother, I dont want you to justify yourself to me - like I have to.

Russo
18-02-08, 04:46 PM
By the way, I dont "bet" nor should you. LOL

Joha
18-02-08, 05:29 PM
I pay Zakah on a regular basis.

I pay extra for charitable purposes.

I left my 35K a year job to work for £12k a year in a clinic for old people.

Now tell me, what have you done for mankind...! Dont bother, I dont want you to justify yourself to me - like I have to.

MashaAllah sis.

I was addressing it to everybody, not just you, and meant it rhetorically. Of course you don't have to justify to anybody, but how do you know those scientists don't give charity?

There's a place for everything - social work like that is useful - but on another level, technology is one of the most effective tools we have to reduce poverty.

Technological advancement has done more for the lives of people in the last century than you could possibly imagine. It has had its downsides too, but free movement of people and ideas, and the subsequent inflow of money into developing countries from expatriates has helped reduce poverty.

I wander what tools you use to work in your old people's home - and how you'd be able to do any of that work if some guy sometime back hadn't invented all those tools. You and I would both probably be in the country somewhere - unable to travel, unable to do all those things we can do to help others less fortunate than ourselves.

If you had said that of people who spend their lives trading - making money with money - everybody would agree. But these aren't traders.

Being able to balance social work with scientific exploration is what defines us as human beings. What you do will help human beings now, and be remembered for eternity. What they do will also help human beings, and be used for generations to come.

Things aren't that black and white.

afsalim
19-02-08, 05:42 AM
Oh my....