How many oscillations does a caesium atomic clock make in a day?
Asked by:
Joanna
Answer
Let us start with the definition of the second:
'The second is the duration of 9 192 631 770 periods of the radiation corresponding
to the transition between the two hyperfine levels of the ground state of the
cesium 133 atom.'
So a cesium atomic clock would make just over 9 billion oscillations_per _second (OPS).
Finding how many oscillations_per_day (OPD) is just a matter of multiplication:
OPD = OPS x 60 x 60 x 24
Where OPD is oscillations per day, and OPS is oscillations per second.
So we find out that the number of oscillations per second is:
794 243 384 928 000
That's 7.94 x 1014 in scientific notation...
Answered by:
Yasar Safkan, Ph.D., Sofware Engineer, Noktalar A.S., Istanbul, Turkey
'The strength and weakness of physicists is that we believe in what we can measure. And if we can't measure it, then we say it probably doesn't exist. And that closes us off to an enormous amount of phenomena that we may not be able to measure because they only happened once. For example, the Big Bang. ... That's one reason why they scoffed at higher dimensions for so many years. Now we realize that there's no alternative... '