New Way of Keeping Time Ticks Ahead

A new way of keeping time and sending time-based signals around the globe took a step forward in a new European test.

Atomic clocks based on the oscillations of a cesium atom keep amazingly steady time and also define the precise length of a second. But cesium clocks are no longer the most accurate. That title has been transferred to an optical clock housed at the U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) in Boulder, Colo. that can keep time to within 1 second in 3.7 billion years.

Live Science Staff
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