MessageToEagle.com

Blueprint For Nuclear Clock Accurate
Over Billions Of Years!

19 March, 2012

MessageToEagle.com - A clock accurate to within a tenth of a second over 14 billion years – the age of the universe – is an important goal for scientists.

A nuclear clock could be as much as one-hundred times more accurate than current atomic clocks, which now serve as the basis for the global positioning system (GPS) and a broad range of important measurements. It could also be useful for certain forms of secure communication – and perhaps of greater interest – for studying the fundamental theories of physics.

“If you give people a better clock, they will use it,” said Alex Kuzmich, a professor in the School of Physics at the Georgia Institute of Technology and one of the paper’s co-authors.

“For most applications, the atomic clocks we have are precise enough. But there are other applications where having a better clock would provide a real advantage.”

Beyond the Georgia Tech physicists, scientists in the School of Physics at the University of New South Wales in Australia and at the Department of Physics at the University of Nevada also contributed to the study.

Early clocks used a swinging pendulum to provide the oscillations needed to track time.

In modern clocks, quartz crystals provide high-frequency oscillations that act like a tuning fork, replacing the old-fashioned pendulum.

Atomic clocks derive their accuracy from laser-induced oscillations of electrons in atoms.

However, these electrons can be affected by magnetic and electrical fields, allowing atomic clocks to drift ever so slightly – about four seconds in the lifetime of the universe.

Because neutrons are much heavier than electrons and densely packed in the atomic nucleus, they are less susceptible to these perturbations than the electrons. A nuclear clock should therefore be less affected by environmental factors than its atomic cousin.

“In our paper, we show that by using lasers to orient the electrons in a very specific way, we can use the neutron of an atomic nucleus as the clock pendulum,” said Corey Campbell, a research scientist in the Kuzmich laboratory and the paper’s first author. “Because the neutron is held so tightly to the nucleus, its oscillation rate is almost completely unaffected by any external perturbations.”


This RF ion trap holds individual thorium atoms while they are laser-cooled to near absolute zero temperature. Credit: Corey Campbell)


To create the oscillations, the researchers plan to use a laser operating at petahertz frequencies — 10 (15) oscillations per second — to boost the nucleus of a thorium 229 ion into a higher energy state. Tuning a laser to create these higher energy states would allow scientists to set its frequency very precisely, and that frequency would be used to keep time instead of the tick of a clock or the swing of a pendulum.

The nuclear clock ion will need to be maintained at a very low temperature – tens of microkelvins – to keep it still.

To produce and maintain such temperatures, physicists normally use laser cooling. But for this system, that would pose a problem because laser light is also used to create the timekeeping oscillations.

To solve that problem, the researchers include a single thorium 232 ion with the thorium 229 ion that will be used for time-keeping. The heavier ion is affected by a different wavelength than the thorium 229. The researchers then cooled the heavier ion, which also lowered the temperature of the clock ion without affecting the oscillations.

“The cooling ion acts as a refrigerator, keeping the clock ion very still,” said Alexander Radnaev, a graduate research assistant in the Kuzmich lab. “This is necessary to interrogate this clock ion for very long and to make a very accurate clock that will provide the next level of performance.”

Calculations suggest that a nuclear clock could be accurate to 10 (-19), compared to 10 (-17) for the best atomic clock.


This image shows an RF ion trap mounted inside an ultra-high vacuum chamber. Here, individual thorium atoms are trapped and laser-cooled to near absolute zero temperature. (Click image for high-resolution version. Credit: Alexander Radnaev)


Because they operate in slightly different ways, atomic clocks and nuclear clocks could one day be used together to examine differences in physical constants. “Some laws of physics may not be constant in time,” Kuzmich said. “Developing better clocks is a good way to study this.”

Though the research team believes it has now demonstrated the potential to make a nuclear clock – which was first proposed in 2003 – it will still be a while before they can produce a working one.

The major challenge ahead is that the exact frequency of the ultraviolet laser emissions needed to excite the thorium nucleus hasn’t yet been determined, despite the efforts of many different research groups.

“People have been looking for this for 30 years,” Campbell said. “It’s worse than looking for a needle in a haystack. It’s more like looking for a needle in a million haystacks.”

But Kuzmich believes that that problem will be solved, allowing physicists to move to the next-generation of phenomenally accurate timekeepers.

“Our research shows that building a nuclear clock in this way is both worthwhile and feasible,” Kuzmich said. “We now have the tools and plans needed to move forward in realizing this system.”

MessageToEagle.com via Georgia Institute of Technology

See also:
Powerful Jet Pointing Directly At Earth

Follow MessageToEagle.com for the latest news on Facebook and Twitter !

Don't Miss Our Stories! Get Our Daily Email Newsletter

Enter your email address:


Once you have confirmed your email address, you will be subscribed to the newsletter.

Recommend this article:

Earth Is In The Middle Of A Space-Time Vortex

Thermonuclear Burning In A Neutron Star Detected For The First Time!

Extremely Distant And Exotic Quasar

Remarkable Extragalactic Object

Super-Earth Discovered Orbiting Several Suns

Gigantic Reservoir Of Water Located 12 Billion Light-Years Away From Earth Discovered

10 Greatest Astronomical Discoveries

Newborn Stars Hidden In Dark Clouds Of Taurus

Subscribe To Our Space, Astronomy, Astrophysics, Earth and Xenology News!

Grab the latest RSS feeds right to your reader, desktop or mobile phone.

Subscribe to RSS headline updates from:
Powered by FeedBurner

Go to - MAIN PAGE

Copyright @ MessageToEagle.com All rights reserved.
Go to - MAIN PAGE

 Subscribe in a reader


Other Popular Articles

Abnormal Star Discovered In The 'Forbidden Zone'
A team of astrophysicists from Germany, France and Italy have discovered in the constellation Leo is an old star. The star's existence raised at once many questions for scientists. The object is definitely not as its "contemporaries" that appeared immediately after the Big Bang event.


Thermonuclear Burning In A Neutron Star Detected For The First Time!
It's a very important discovery! For the first time, an international team of scientists have detected all phases of thermonuclear burning in a neutron star, located close to the center of the galaxy in the globular cluster Terzan 5.

Alcubierre Warp Drive - A Doomsday Weapon?
Is the Alcubierre warp drive a doomsday weapon or our passport to the Universe? The Alcubierre warp drive is a theoretical tool that would allow for spacecraft to travel long distances in space rapidly, by deforming the space-time continuum in a bubble around the spaceship...

Astronomical Mystery - Tremendous Explosion And Appearance Of Odd Rings
Twenty five years ago, on 1987 February 23, the brightest supernova of modern times was observed in the Large Magellanic Cloud.
The collision occurred at speeds near 60 million kilometers per hour and shock-heats the ring material causing it to glow.
Over time, astronomers have watched and waited for the expanding debris from this tremendous stellar explosion to crash into previously expelled material...

Doesn't Secret Dark Matter Exist?
The more scientists study dark matter they know lesser and are not particularly optimistic about their results.
After completing this study, we know less about dark matter than we did before," said Matt Walker, of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics.
A mysterious and still unknown substance is totally invisible in the Universe and reveals its presence only through its gravitational pull...

Explore Alien Worlds

Countless Earthlike Alien Worlds That Will Never Be Like Earth

Most Alien World We Can Only Imagine

This is not an alien world, anyone of us will ever be able to visit. It's not very far away, only about 40 light years from Earth...

Auroras On Alien Worlds Can Be Stunningly Beautiful







Dwarf Irregular Galaxy That Forces Scientists To Re-Evaluate Old Theory
Astronomers from Center for Astrophysics of the University of Porto, Portugal and Oskar Klein Centre, Stockholm University, Sweden come up with new findings regarding one of the most studied objects - the dwarf galaxy I Zw 18.
The results led the scientists to the conclusion that this enigmatic blue compact dwarf might force astronomers to review current galaxy formation models and much of what is known about galaxy formation and evolution might need substantial revision.

"The Most Profound Mystery In All Of Science" - Dark Energy

No Empty Space In The Universe - Dark Matter Fills The Intergalactic Space

Black Gaps In The Sky Puzzle Astronomers

Mysteries Of A Dark Universe

Peculiar Nebulous Objects

Countless Trillions Of Glowing Orbs That Illuminate The Universe

Mysterious Dark Matter

Super Massive Black Holes Lurking In The Hearts Of Galaxies

Violent Dragon Clash Billions Of Years Ago
NGC 5907 is sometimes called the "Splinter" or Knife Edge Galaxy because of its unusual appearance. It is a spiral galaxy lying in the Dragon constellation, about 40 million light-years from Earth that could have been formed through a gigantic collision of galaxies, 8 to 9 billion years ago.

W3Counter