The strontium optical lattice clock is the first of its kind to be commercially available and will cost about 500 million yen ($3.3 million).
Measuring time to the 19th decimal place, as nuclear clocks could do, would allow scientists to study very fast processes ...
These optical clocks are still in the testing phase, but some of them are already a hundred times more accurate. This is why they are to become the basis for the global definition of seconds in the ...
It is about one hundred times more precise than the traditional cesium atomic clocks The device measures time by using the optical transition of atoms confined in standing waves of light.
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