There is much in the news these days about time. For multiple reasons. I find that very interesting as we are coming to the END OF TIME as we know it. This World has an expiration date.
Congress is currently addressing locking our clocks into a permanent STANDARD. Will it be the conventional time or will it be daylight savings??
Scientists are clamoring for a NEW UNDERSTANDING OF TIME WITH THEIR NUCLEAR CLOCKS.
WASHINGTON — If only for 90 minutes, Republicans and Democrats found an issue on Thursday that didn’t involve President Donald Trump or divide them predictably along party lines.
Instead, the Senate committee hearing on whether to end the wrenching, twice-a-year shifts between daylight saving time and standard timesplit lawmakers in other, more complex ways.
Would they fret about eliminating golfers’ late-day tee times if daylight saving time were eliminated?Or are they more worried about school kids walking to bus stops in the dark if daylight saving time went year-round?
(well, if we don’t know what is more important on this issue our values have really crashed. Who cares about GOLFERS? Besides the rich elite? We should all care about the safety of our school aged children.)
“Almost everyone agrees that changing the clock twice a year doesn’t make sense,” Senate Commerce Committee Chairman Ted Cruz said at the hearing.
He was referring to the time shifts that begin when people “spring forward” an hour each March in states such as Maryland that follow daylight saving time.
The idea is to make more use of daylight hours. The shift is followed by the clocks “falling back” an hour on the first Sunday of November.
The switchover, which can leave people woozy, has been blamed for everything from traffic accidents to increased risk of heart attacks.
“I think there is widespread agreement on locking the clock. But where to lock it?” said Cruz, a Texas Republican. “The reason we’re holding this hearing is these are real arguments and they have real impacts on people.”
Among those people are golfers.
Jay Karen, CEO of the National Golf Course Owners Association, told the panel that golfers relish the later sunsets that daylight saving time provides.
“Our industry is uniquely tied to daylight,” Karen said.
While the association doesn’t take a formal position on whether to make daylight saving time permanent, he said courses would suffer if Congress went the opposite way and locked in standard time year-round. Gee, break my heart. Like they don’t already enjoy an overabundance of special privileges or don’t cater primarily to the wealthy and ultra rich from whom they prosper greatly. So, the golfers can go home to their families after work instead of chasing a ball around a highly maintained course and drinking with their buds.
“While we sympathize with some of the sleep-related arguments for permanent standard time, we believe the counterweight of outside activity in the latter parts of the day provides significant health benefits that cannot be ignored,” Karen said.
Sen. Ed Markey, a Massachusetts Democrat, posed a simpler argument for retaining daylight saving time throughout the year: happiness.
“We need more sunshine,” Markey said. “When the sun’s out, it just increases the likelihood that the corners of people’s mouths are going to be turned upward.” Well, you are not MAKING MORE SUNSHINE, it is still the same amount no matter what time of the day you designate for it. Folks will still be smiling just the same. It just blows me away that people want to CONTROL everything.
But opponents say daylight saving time is naturally less healthy than standard time.
That’s because standard time allows “a more natural alignment between our social schedules and the sun’s cycle every day of the year,” said Karin Johnson, a Massachusetts sleep medicine physician. I agree, everything we can do to stay as close to natural is best of us all around. This crazy society is submerged in the artificial and technological.
The Uniform Time Act of 1966established a standardized daylight saving time system throughout the U.S. Hawaii and Arizona, except the Navajo Nation, don’t observe it.
In 2022, the Senate passed a bill that would have made daylight saving time the new permanent standard time, but the legislation didn’t pass in the House.
In Maryland, Democratic Del. Brian Crosby of St. Mary’s County has led unsuccessful efforts in recent years to move the state toward permanent daylight saving time. Crosby did not immediately reply to The Baltimore Sun’s messages on Thursday.
The fate of daylight saving time is best left to states, testified Scott Yates, an advocate for ending the twice-a-year switchovers.
“The main reason is geography mainly,” Yates said. “The difference in where each state is makes a big difference” in the timing of sunrises and sunsets, he said.
He suggested it would be a federal overreach to say “that there is one solution that is exactly right for Texas,” and the same solution is right for another state, such as Georgia.
His solution?Lock the clock into permanent daylight saving time in 2027, “while continuing to allow each state to opt out and remain in standard time if it decides to do so.” He noted that Hawaii and Arizona already do that.
During the hearing, Sen. Rick Scott, a Florida Republican, testified on behalf of his bill that would make daylight saving time permanent. The bill is co-sponsored by Democrats, including Markey, and Republicans.
“We have a great opportunity to finally get this done— with President Trump on board — to lock the clock,” Scott said.
(NEXSTAR) — We’re just a couple of weeks away from the end of daylight saving time, the back half of a twice-a-year practice the U.S. has observed for decades.
The country has had a back-and-forth relationship with the seasonal changing of the clocks, with recent polls showing a consistentdesire among Americans to do away with the practice altogether.
A May 2024 YouGov poll found 58% of Democrats and 63% of Republicans support making daylight saving time permanent. Of those who supported locking the clocks in a 2022 Monmouth University poll, 44% preferred permanent daylight saving time (the time we observe from March to November).
It’s the handful of states that have considered permanent standard time (the time we observe from November to March), however, that health experts agree with.
Dr. Karin Johnson, spokesperson for the American Academy of Sleep Medicine (AASM) and co-chair of the Coalition for Permanent Standard Time, is among those experts.
In addition to raising awareness of the benefits of permanent standard time (more on that in a moment), the coalition is hoping to encourage states to pass bills. Often, according to Johnson, the push is for the state-level bills to be in pact form, essentially allowing a state to be on year-round standard time if one or more of its neighboring states does the same. The overall hope is that, if more states call for all-year standard time, federal legislation will go the same route.
So why do Johnson, the coalition she co-chairs, and other health experts want to lock the clock on standard time?
Permanent standard time is “undeniably” the best option for our health, “if you believe in science, according to Dr. Alaina Tiani, a clinical health psychologist who specializes in behavioral sleep medicine at the Cleveland Clinic’s Sleep Disorder Center.
“Having more of that light exposure at those earlier times is essentially better for our body’s rhythms than, you know, the opposite with daylight savings and having the evening light exposure,” Tiani told Nexstar.
When we “fall back” in November, sunrises will slide forward by an hour. For some parts of the country, that means moving the sunrise from the 7 o’clock hour to the 6 o’clock hour. If the U.S. were to stay on daylight saving time year-round, sunrises would be much later, nearing 9 a.m. in some areas.
Getting enough sunlight exposure in the morning is important for our melatonin system, Tiani explained. You may take a melatonin supplement to help you sleep at night, but the system is more about darkness than sleep.
“It’s a hormone that our body produces to kind of get the processes started for sleep when it notices that it’s dark outside, but in the morning and with sunlight exposure, light actually suppresses melatonin,” Tiani said. Permanent standard time would afford us more of those crucial morning daylight hours.
It could also be better for our circadian rhythm,otherwise known as our internal clocks, which can contribute to other health factors like blood pressure, heart rate and cortisol levels, according to Tiani.
Among those who could benefit most from those early sunlight hours are children, Johnson noted. She highlighted a study conducted in Indiana, which found that children living on the side that was on permanent standard time did much better on their SATs than children living in the part of the state that changed the clocks twice a year.
There is a potential downside to the earlier sunrises: come summertime, the sun would rise in the 3 or 4 o’clock hours, depending on where you live. However, according to Johnson, this isn’t such a bad thing.
You’re more likely to be able to sleep through those early sunrise hours, she explained. They also come with earlier sunsets, which could make falling asleep at night easier — especially for your kids. Earlier sunrises could also give you more time to work out or run errands during the cooler morning hours of a summer day, Johnson said, adding that that’s one of the reasons parts of Arizona are on standard time year-round.
The potential benefits to our sleep and circadian rhythm could have even more positives associated with them, Johnson explained.
She told Nexstar that other studies have found relationships between sleep and circadian rhythm deprivation and mental health problems, drug use, speeding, delinquent behaviors, educational performance and employment salaries.
“We know that a lot of the drivers for people becoming criminals increase in the sleep-deprived population,” Johnson said. She also noted that research has found that areas where the sun rises and sets later, as it does when we are observing daylight saving time, had 20% more fatal car crashes than those on the opposite side of the clock, refuting an argument frequently made by proponents of permanent daylight saving time that the extra light at night would reduce such incidents.
Another potential benefit of permanent standard time? A decrease in suicide rates.
According to Johnson, a recent study found that switching to permanent standard time, instead of the seasonal daylight saving time we’re currently on, could prevent up to hundreds, if not thousands, of suicides per year.
Outside of the health benefits, there’s also the historical point, Johnson noted: the U.S. has tried observing daylight saving time permanently before and “it’s failed.”
States are permitted to exempt themselves from permanent daylight saving time and lack the authority to observe daylight saving time year-round. For now, only Hawaii and part of Arizona observe standard time year-round.
Daylight saving time ends on Nov. 3 this year and will start again on March 9.
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Daniel 7:25 King James Version
25 And he shall speak great words against the most High, and shall wear out the saints of the most High, and think to change times and laws: and they shall be given into his hand until a time and times and the dividing of time.
In the biblical context, time is viewed as a creation of God and serves as a framework for His divine plan. The Bible distinguishes between two Greek concepts of time:chronos, which refers to sequential time (like clocks and calendars), and kairos,which signifies the opportune moments in God’s plan.Time is not seen as random; rather, it is under God’s control and is used to reveal His purpose.The Bible uses specific terms to describe time, including the Hebrew word “et”and the Greek words “kairos” and “chronos”. Ultimately, God is considered timeless, having created time as part of His creation. Source: pursueGOD.org+3
Old English tima “temporal duration, limited space of time,” from Proto-Germanic *tima- “time” (source also of Old Norse timi“time, proper time,” Swedish timme“an hour“), reconstructed to be from PIE *di-mon-,suffixed form of root *da- “to divide” (compare tide).The abstract sense of “time as an indefinite continuous duration” is recorded from late 14c. Personified as an aged bald man (but with a forelock) carrying a scythe and an hour-glass.
Satan’s plan is to reduce us all to nothing more than random particles tossed together by chance. God had purpose for placing us on the this Earth. And it was not so that we could fill time up with the pursuit of our own lusts and gratification. Satan wants to take our focus off of … Click Here to Read More
As this world gets crazier and crazier, TIME TRAVEL, SPACE TRAVEL, INTER-DIMENTIONAL TRAVEL, AND VIRTUAL TRAVEL, are all becoming more of a reality… OR ARE THEY? It gets more and more difficult everyday to determine what is real and what is not. Here are a few interesting articles for you to ponder. What do you … Click Here to Read More
Tags: TIME, Clocks, Perception, Space, Magick, Philanthropy, Wealthy, WEF, Bells, Deserts, Mountains, Megalomaniacs, Millennium, End of the Age, Maritime, Ancestors Symbols, Signs and Sigils these are the language of the Elite/Magicians/Illumined. These are employed not only as a means of communicaiton but as instruments of Magick meant to conjure demonic assistance for the completion of … Click Here to Read More
A strontium optical clock produces about 50,000 times more oscillations per second than a cesium clock, the basis for the current definition of a second.
Andrew Brookes/National Physical Laboratory/Science Source
Inside a laboratory nestled in the foothills of the Rocky Mountains, amid a labyrinth of lenses, mirrors, and other optical machinery bolted to a vibration-resistant table, an apparatus resembling a chimney pipe rises toward the ceiling. On a recent visit, the silvery pipe held a cloud of thousands of supercooled cesium atoms launched upward by lasers and then left to float back down. With each cycle, a maser—like a laser that produces microwaves—hit the atoms to send their outer electrons jumping to a different energy state.
1960, acronym for“light amplification by stimulated emission of radiation,” on pattern of maser (1955). A corresponding verb, lase,was coined by 1962. Related: Lasered; lasering. Laser disc recorded from 1980. Earlier laser was the name of a type of gum-resin from North Africa used medicinally (1570s), from Latin; still earlier it was an Old English and Middle English name for some weed, probably cockle.
cockle(n.2)
name of flowering weeds that grow in wheat fields, Old English coccel “darnel,” used in Middle English to translate the Bible word now usually given as tares (see tare
a type of laser that emits microwaves, 1955, acronym from “microwave amplification (by) stimulated emission (of) radiation.” Related: Mase (v.). also from 1955
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The machine, called a cesium fountain clock, was in the middle of a two-week measurement run at a National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) research facility in Boulder, Colo., repeatedly fountaining atoms. Detectors inside measured photons released by the atoms as they settled back down to their original states. Atoms make such transitions by absorbing a specific amount of energy and then emitting it in the form of a specific frequency of light, meaning the light’s waves always reach their peak amplitude at a regular, dependable cadence. This cadence provides a natural temporal reference that scientists can pinpoint with extraordinary precision.
By repeating the fountain process hundreds of thousands of times, the instrument narrows in on the exact transition frequency of the cesium atoms. Although it’s technically a clock, the cesium fountain could not tell you the hour. “This instrument does not keep track of time,”says Vladislav Gerginov, a senior research associate at NIST and the keeper of this clock. “It’s a frequency reference—a tuning fork.” By tuning a beam of light to match this resonance frequency, metrologists can “realize time,”as they phrase it, counting the oscillations of the light wave.
The signal from this tuning fork—about nine gigahertz—is used to calibrate about 18 smaller atomic clocksat NIST that run 24 hours a day. Housed in egg incubators to control the temperature and humidity,these clocks maintain the official time for the U.S.,which is compared with similar measurements in other countries to set Coordinated Universal Time, or UTC.
A thorium nuclear clock resides at the JILA laboratory in Colorado.
Jason Koxvold
Gerginov, dressed casually in a short-sleeve plaid shirt and sneakers, spoke of the instrument with an air of pride. He had recently replaced the clock’s microwave cavity, a copper passageway in the middle of the pipe where the atoms interact with the maser. The instrument would soon be christened NIST-F4,the new principal reference clock for the U.S.“It’s going to be the primary standard of frequency,” Gerginov says, looking up at the metallic fountain, a three-foot-tall vacuum chamber with four layers of nickel-iron-alloy magnetic shielding. “Until the definition of the second changes.”
Since 1967 the second has been defined as the duration of 9,192,631,770 cycles of cesium’s resonance frequency. In other words, when the outer electron of a cesium atom falls to the lower state and releases light, the amount of time it takes to emit 9,192,631,770 cycles of the light wave defines one second. “You can think of an atom as a pendulum,” says NIST research fellow John Kitching. “We cause the atoms to oscillate at their natural resonance frequency.Every atom of cesium is the same, and the frequencies don’t change. They’re determined by fundamental constants. And that’s why atomic clocks are the best way of keeping time right now.”
But cesium clocks are no longer the most accurate clocks available. In the past five years the world’s most advanced atomic clocks have reached a critical milestone by taking measurements that are more than two orders of magnitude more accurate than those of the best cesium clocks.These newer instruments, called optical clocks, use different atoms, such as strontium or ytterbium, that transition at much higher frequencies.They release optical light, as opposed to the microwave light given out by cesium, effectively dividing the second into about 50,000 times as many “ticks” as a cesium clock can measure.
This post is about light and how our lives are currently being impacted by light in ways about which we are totally unaware. We should not be surprised as just about every issue we are facing is in some way connected with ENERGY. LIGHT is probably the biggest source of energy that exists. Those of … Click Here to Read More
Communication what a complex, multi-faceted Word. It is so vital to our existence and so core to our relationships. Communication simply put is a verbal or written exchange. I talk, you listen. You talk, I listen. Both parties are intently involved in the process. Originally the only way to communicate was to be face to … Click Here to Read More
The fact that optical clocks have surpassed the older atomic clocks has created something of a paradox. The new clocks can measure time more accurately than a cesium clock—but cesium clocks define time. The duration of one second is inherently linked to the transition frequency of cesium. Until a redefinition occurs, nothing can truly be a more accurate second because 9,192,631,770 cycles of cesium’s resonance frequency is what a second is.
Atomic clock scientist Jun Ye of JILA hopes such nuclear clocks can eventually beat today’s most accurate timekeepers. Jason Koxvold
This problem is why many scientists believe it is time for a new definition of the second. In 2024 a task force set up by the International Bureau of Weights and Measures (BIPM), headquartered in Sèvres, France, released a road map that established criteria for redefining the second.* These include that the new standard is measured by at least three different clocks at different institutions, that those measurements are routinely compared with values from other types of clocks and that laboratories around the world will be able to build their own clocks to measure the target frequency. If sufficient progress is made on the criteria in the next two years, then the second might change as soon as 2030.
But not everyone is onboard with redefining the second now.For one thing, there’s no clear immediate benefit.Today’s cesium clocks are plenty accurate enough for most practical applications—including synchronizing the GPS satellites we all depend on. We can always improve the accuracy of the second later if new innovations come along that require better timing. “Today we don’t really profit from an immediate change,”says Nils Huntemann, a scientist at the Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt (PTB), the national metrology institute of Germany. Redefining the second wouldn’t be straightforward, either—scientists would be forced to pick a new standard from the many advanced atomic clocks now in existence, with improvements being made all the time. How should they choose?
It is very clear that time is ambiguous and defies definition and exact measurement. God made it that way. All the SCIENCE they have applied to the notion of time has been for the benefit of their TECHNOLOGY. Not for the benefit of humanity.
Many scientists say we should improve the definition of time simply because we can. That is the scientific attitude about everything. Let’s do it just because we can. Let’s try it just to see what will happen. No real reason or justification other than their ridiculous curiosity.
Regardless of the complications, some physicists believe that they have an obligation to use the best clocks available. “It’s just a matter of basic principle,” says Elizabeth Donley, chief of the time and frequency division at NIST. “You want to allow for the best measurements you can possibly make.”
When is enough, ENOUGH??
Always keep in mind that the ROOT of anything is all that matters. Find the origin of any word to uncover the TRUTH. Here you will see that just about any modern invention has a hidden purpose meant to divide and distract humanity from God’s plan and purpose.
The world’s first clocks were invented thousands of years ago, when the first human civilizations devised devices that tracked the sun’s movement to divide the day into intervals.
The word “device” has its origins in Latin, specifically from the past participle of “dīvidō,” meaning “to divide”.It originally referred to a method of dividing or a contrivance, and over time, it evolved to mean “something invented or fitted to a particular use or purpose”. The term has been used to describe inventions, tools, and plans.
Contrivance is a noun that means something that is created or arranged in a clever or artificial way, especially a device or a plan. A contrivance can be a clever invention or a plot device, or it can be a dishonest scheme or a forced situation.
Have you ever wondered, what is the connection between Technology and the fascination with things spooky and supernatural? ALL the “Arts and Sciences” stem from the interchange between humans and the fallen Angels. The wisdom given in exchange for access to the females of the day. Everything in this life stems from a spiritual root! … Click Here to Read More
The earliest versions of sundials were made by the ancient Egyptians around 1500 B.C.E. Later, water clocks, first used by Egyptians and called clepsydras, meaning “water thieves,”by the ancient Greeks, marked time by letting water drain out of vessels with a hole punched in the bottom. These instruments were perhaps the first to measure a duration of time independent of the movements of celestial bodies. Mechanical clocks driven by weights debuted in medieval European churches, and they ticked along at consistent rates, leading to the modern 24-hour day.The tolling of bells to mark the hour even gave us the word “clock,”which has its roots in the Latin clocca, meaning “bell.” spacer
God controls the Sun, Moon and Stars, GOD created all things and HE declared that we measure time by the Sun, Moon and Stars. He declared night and day and He declared the Seasons.
God wants us to look to Him for all things, but especially for our understanding of Day and Night, Weeks and Months and Seasons. Why? Because time plays a huge role in His plan for humanity. We all individually have an expiration date that is set by Him. The World has an expiration date as well. God has a set time for all things to play out before He puts an end to pain, suffering and death forever. It will occur according to His Will.
The Devil and his minions HATE everything that is GOD’s, especially TIME, because they know what will happen to them on that final day. So, they are doing everything they can to wipe out God’s plan and take permanent authority over Earth.
TAGS: Calendars, Gregorian, Egyptian, Roman, Greek, Mesopotamian, Hebrew, French, God’s Calendar, Calendar Restored, TRUMPETS, TABERNACLES, Yom Kippur, the Rapture, The Second Coming, The Zodiac, Signs in the Heavens, Solarium, Astronomy, Astrology, TIME, Seasons, Appointed Feasts, Jesus Christ, Resurrection, Judgement, Babylon, Israel, New Moon, Elohim, Planetary Systems, Stars, 12 Tribes, God’s Light, God’s Forgiveness, Repentance, Enoch, … Click Here to Read More
UPDATE ADDED 12/31/24 It has only been in the last twenty, maybe thirty years that GATEWAYS, DOORS and PORTALS have been a topic of discussion, let alone top story online and in the media. The reason they have come to the forefront is because of the uptick in spiritual activity. Gateways, Doors and Portals have … Click Here to Read More
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Jesus says Beelzebub is Lucifer. (Luke 11:17-22) ‘Baal’ has different pronunciations in different places. So, you will see Baal, Bel in Babylon, and Beel in the land of the Philistines – Canaan. Beelzebub was a Philistine god, that the Jews hated. It means Baal Master, or lord of the flies. A rose by any other … Click Here to Read More
DID GOD AT ANYTIME IN HIS WORD OR IN THE SPOKEN WORDS OF JESUS CHRIST SAY… “I HAVE GIVEN YOU FREQUENCIES TO HEAL YOU? DID GOD SAY “YOU ARE HEALED BY SOUNDS OF BELLS?”? DID GOD SAY LEARN THE “SCIENCE” OF ENERGY AND FREQUENCIES, STUDY TO SHOW YOURSELF APPROVED IN THIS AND YOU WILL FIND … Click Here to Read More
As mechanical clocks became more precise, particularly with the development of the pendulum clock in the mid-17th century, timekeepers further divided the hour into minutes and seconds. (First applied to angular degrees, the word “minute” comes from the Latin prima minuta, meaning the “first small part,”and “second” comes from secunda minuta, the “second small part.”)For centuries towns maintained their own local clocks, adjusting them periodically so the strike of noon occurred just as the sundial indicated midday. It wasn’t until the 19th century, when distant rail stations needed to maintain coordinated train schedules, that time zones were established and timekeeping was standardized around the world. The Industrial Revolution. They also wanted to regulate factory workers schedules and measure the value of a workers contribution.
Jen Christiansen; Sources: Elizabeth Donley and John Kitching/National Institute of Standards and Technology (scientific reviewers)
Clocks improved drastically in the 20th century after French physicists and brothers Jacques and Pierre Curie discovered that applying an electric current to a crystal of quartz causes it to vibrate with a stable frequency.The first clock that used a quartz oscillator was developed by Warren Marrison and Joseph Horton of BellLaboratories in 1927. The clock ran a current through quartz and used a circuit to divide the resulting frequency until it was low enough to drive a synchronous motor that controlled the clock’s face. Today billions of quartz clocks are produced every year for wristwatches, mobile devices, computers, and other electronics.
The key innovation that led to atomic clocks came from American physicist Isidor Isaac Rabi of Columbia University, who won the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1944 for developing a way to precisely measure atoms’ resonance frequencies. His technique, called the molecular-beam magnetic resonance method, finely tuned a radio frequency to cause atoms’ quantum states to transition. In 1939 Rabi suggested using this method to build a clock, and the next year his colleagues at Columbia applied his technique to determine the resonance frequency of cesium.
This element was viewed as an ideal reference atom for timekeeping. It’s a soft, silvery metal that is liquid near room temperature, similar to mercury. Cesium is a relatively heavy element, meaning it moves more slowly than lighter elements and is therefore easier to observe. Its resonance frequency is also higher than those of other clock candidates of the time, such as rubidium and hydrogen, meaning it had the potential to create a more precise time standard. These properties eventually won cesium the role of defining the second nearly 40 years later.
But the first atomic clock was not a cesium clock. In 1949 Harold Lyons, a physicist at NIST’s precursor, the National Bureau of Standards (NBS), built an atomic clock based on Rabi’s magnetic resonance method using ammonia molecules. It looked like a computer rack with a series of gauges and dials on it, so Lyons affixed a clockface to the top for a public demonstration to indicate that his machine was, in fact, a clock. This first atomic clock, however, couldn’t match the precision of the best quartz clocks of the time, and ammonia was abandoned when it became clear that cesium clocks would produce better results.
A cloud of strontium atoms is seen in an optical lattice clock at the German national metrology institute Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt.
Christian Lisdat/PTB
Both the NBS and the National Physical Laboratory (NPL) in the U.K. developed cesium beam clocksin the 1950s. A key breakthrough came from Harvard University physicist Norman Ramsey, who found that it was possible to improve the measurements by using two pulses of microwaves to induce the atomic transitions rather than one. Cesium clocks continued to advance for the remainder of the century and, along with atomic clocks using different elements, became more precise and more compact.
At the time, the second was defined according to astronomical time. Known as the ephemeris second, it was equal to 1/31,556,925.9747 of the tropical year (the time it takes for the sun to return to the same position in the sky) in 1900. Between 1955 and 1958, NPL scientists compared measurements from their cesium beam clock with the ephemeris second as measured by the U.S. Naval Observatory by tracking the position of the moon with respect to background stars. In August 1958 the second was calculated as 9,192,631,770 cycles of the cesium transition frequency—the same number that would be used for the new definition nine years later.
Since then, atomic clocks have continued to progress, particularly with the development of cesium fountain clocks in the 1980s. But by 2006 newer clocks were beating them.
In addition to the clocks at NIST, some of the most advanced timekeepers in the world can be found at the University of Colorado Boulder, down the street in another lab pushing the frontier of timekeeping. JILA, a joint venture of NIST and the university, houses four “optical lattice clocks”that are among the global record holders for accuracy. (The lab was previously called the Joint Institute for Laboratory Astrophysics and now is simply known by the acronym.)
These state-of-the-art instruments are housed in large rectangular boxes with sliding doors that double as dry-erase boards, each covered in equations and diagrams. Components twinkle in the dim light of the lab as lasers and readout devices pulse with light.
Elizabeth Donley is chief of the time and frequency division at the U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology.
Jason Koxvold
Each clock works by firing two lasers at each otherto create an interference pattern called an optical lattice, a grid with areas of high and low intensity. Pancake-shaped clouds of thousands of neutral strontium atoms become trapped in the high-intensity parts of the lattice, suspended in place.
Another laser then induces an electron transition in the atoms, pushing the outer electrons up an entire orbital level. This is a larger transition than occurs in the cesium atoms, where the electrons only move up one “hyperfine” level. But as in the cesium clock, detectors look for photons released when the electrons settle back to their original states to confirm that the laser is at the correct frequency to make the electrons hop. Compared with the cesium transition, which occurs at about nine billion hertz, the strontium transition requires a much higher frequency: 429,228,004,229,873.65 Hz.
Each of the four clocks in the lab serves a different purpose, measuring interactions between the atoms or effects from the environment—such as gravity, temperature fluctuations or wayward electromagnetic fields—in an attempt to reduce these sources of uncertainty. Optical clocks are so sensitive that the slightest disturbance, even someone slamming a nearby door, will shift the target transition frequency.
The key limiting factor in an optical lattice clock is blackbody radiation, says Jun Ye, lead researcher of the JILA lab. This radiation is the thermal energyreleased by any body of mass because of its temperature alone. To compensate for this effect, Ye and his team built a new thermal-control system inside the vacuum chamber of one of the clocks, a “fairly heroic effort” that Ye attributes to his students. The projectallowed them to measure the transition frequency of strontium with a systematic uncertainty of 8.1 × 10–19, the most accurate clock measurement ever made. This strontium optical lattice clock and other, similar models are now among the leading candidates to redefine the second.
Cesium fountain clocks use a maze of lasers to control and measure atoms.
Jason Koxvold
The other main contenders are called single-ion clocks. Some of the best examples can be found at NIST and at the German PTB lab. This type suspends one charged ion (in this case, an atom with one or more electrons removed so that it carries a positive charge) within a trap of electromagnetic fields and then induces an atomic transition with a laser. Currently the most accurate of these clocks uses an aluminum ion.
Single-ion clocks avoid the noise that light lattices introduce to a system, Huntemann says, and “there is generally a smaller sensitivity to external fields,” including fields in the experiment as well as the environment. Optical lattice clocks, however, scrutinize thousands of atoms at once, improving accuracy.
Huntemann is researching ways to trap and measure multiple ions at once, such as strontium and ytterbium ions, within the same clock. This approach would allow scientists to probe two different atomic transitions simultaneously, and the clock could average its frequency measurements more quickly—though not as fast as an optical lattice clock.
Ion clocks and optical lattice clocks have been trading the accuracy record back and forth for the past two decades.They have even demonstrated how time passes faster at higher elevations—a prediction from Einstein’s general theory of relativity, which showed that time dilates, or stretches, closer to large masses (in this case, Earth). In a 2022 experiment, parts of a strontium optical lattice clock at JILA separated by just a millimeter in height measured a time difference on the order of 0.0000000000000000001 (10–19). This tiny aberration would have been too small for a cesium clock to detect.
If scientists choose to redefine the second, they must decide not only which clock to use but also which atomic transition: that of strontium atoms or ytterbium or aluminum ions—or something else. One possible solution is to base the definition on not just one atomic transition but the average of all the transitions from different kinds of optical clocks. If an ensemble of clocks, each with its own statistical weighting, is used to redefine the second, then future clocks could be added to the definition as needed.
Vladislav Gerginov works on one such clock called NIST-F4 at NIST’s Colorado campus.
Jason Koxvold
Last year Ye and his team demonstrated the viability of a nuclear clock based on thorium. This type of clock uses a nuclear transition—a shift in the quantum state of atomic nuclei—rather than an electron transition.Because nuclei are less sensitive to external interference than electrons are, nuclear clocks may become even more accurate than optical clocks once the technology is refined.
If the second doesn’t get redefined in 2030, scientists can try again in 2034 and 2038at the next two meetings of the General Conference on Weights and Measures. A new definition won’t change much, if anything, for most people, but it will eventually and inevitably lead to technological advances. Researchers are already dreaming up applications such as quantum communication networks or upgraded GPS satellitesthat could pinpoint any location on Earth to within a centimeter. Other uses are just starting to be envisioned.
By pushing clocks forward, scientists may do more than redefine time—they might redefine our understanding of the universe.Supersensitive clocks that can detect minute changes in the passing of time—as shown in the time-dilation experiment—could be used to detect gravitational waves that pass through Earth as a consequence of massive cataclysms in space. By mapping the gravitational distortion of spacetime more precisely than ever, such clocks could also be used to study dark matter—the missing mass thought to be ubiquitous in the cosmos—as well as how gravity interacts with quantum theory.
Such endeavors could even rewrite our understanding of time itself—which has always been a more complicated notion in physics than in practical life. “The underlying classical laws say that there is no intrinsic difference between the past and future nor any intrinsic direction of determination from past to future,” says Jenann Ismael, a philosopher of science at Johns Hopkins University.
In any case, now that we have clocks that outstrip the literal definition of the second, many scientists say the way forward is obvious: we should improve the definition of time simply because we can.“As with any new idea in science, even if it is not exactly clear who needs a better measurement, when a better measurement is available, then you find the application,” says Patrizia Tavella, director of the time department at BIPM, the organization that defines the International System of Units. “We can do better,” she says of the current second. “Let’s do better.”
*Editor’s Note (2/24/25): This sentence was edited after posting to correct the English name of the International Bureau of Weights and Measures.
Long ago we humans defined a day as the time it takes Earth to make one rotation about its axis, with one sunrise and one sunset. Our predecessors partitioned that day into 24 hours. But if Earth’s rotation slows down a little, it takes a bit longer than one day to complete it. That has been happening for many years. Because the atomic clocks we use to pace everything from Internet communications to GPS apps to automated stock trades never slow down, global timekeepers periodically have added a leap second to the clocks to keep them in sync with Earth. Since 1972 we have made this awkward addition 27 times.
For the first time, however, we may have to subtract a leap second because since around 1990 Earth’s rotation has been speeding up, counteracting the slowdown and shortening the day. There are two explanations for why, which I’ll explain … in a second.
The reversal has many people asking why we should bother with leap seconds at all. Each time an adjustment is needed, a mind-boggling number of computers and telecom operations have to be changed. On a regular day, the National Institute of Standards and Technology, which keeps atomic time for the U.S. and synchronizes most of the world’s computers, receives more than 100 billion time-coordination requests from up to a billion computers. And leap-second adjustments can create problems. An addition in 2012 was blamed for Reddit suddenly going dark and for foiling operational systems at Qantas Airways, leading to long flight delays across Australia.
What if we just ignored the fact that Earth’s rotation and atomic clocks are off by a second or even off by one minute, which they are estimated to be a century from now if we do nothing until then? In our highly digitized world, does the exact length of the rotational day even matter?
Earth rotates because our solar system condensed from a rotating cloud of gas and dust. Outer space provides virtually zero drag, so the planets, including Earth, just keep spinning. As Earth turns, the gravitational pull between it and the moon, and to a lesser degree the sun, creates ocean tides. As tides grind across the seafloor, they create friction, which gradually slows the planet’s rotation. Back in the dinosaur era, a day was about 23.5 hours long; since then, tidal friction has extended it.
Matthew Twombly
Studies of seismic waves show that Earth has a solid inner core and a liquid outer core, which are wrapped by a solid mantle and crust. Currents in the outer core cause the mantle to rotate faster or slower in any given year, but over centuries the changes tend to cancel out, making tidal slowing the prevailing trend.
Matthew Twombly
Tidal slowing is consistent, but Earth’s rotational speedup has been counteracting that trend, and the time between added leap seconds has been getting longer, from about a year in the 1970s to three or four years in the 2010s.
Jen Christiansen (timeline); Source: Time Service Department, U.S. Naval Observatory (timeline data)
Calculations indicated that by 2026 the ongoing speedup would overtake the slowdown, and we would have to subtract a leap second.
But now global warming is complicating that projection. As the massive ice sheets across the North and South Poles melted at the end of the most recent ice age, the weight of that ice decreased, and the crust that had been compressed underneath it began to rebound, which it is still doing today. That has made Earth more spherical. (The planet is not a perfect sphere; it’s slightly wider around the equator.) The change in shape means Earth’s overall mass is distributed a little closer to its axis of rotation, speeding its movement in the same way that ice skaters spin faster when pulling in their outstretched arms.
Matthew Twombly
As ice sheets warm, however, the meltwater spreads out across the global ocean, and most of the ocean is at lower latitudes, farther from the rotation axis than the ice caps are. That slows the spin (the skaters extending their arms outward). For now this effect is stronger, delaying how soon the rotational speedup will overtake the tidal slowdown. According to a recent study, this counterforce means we won’t have to subtract a leap second until 2029.
Matthew Twombly
Given so many vagaries, it’s reasonable to ask if we should add or subtract leap seconds at all. And because tidal slowing will always be the long-term trend, we may never again need to subtract a second, so why go through the trouble one time? Few computer programs are written to allow for a negative leap second.
Reverence for the rotational day may be the only reason to keep atomic time in sync with it. If the two time stamps diverge, “for most people, there are no real ramifications,” says Duncan Carr Agnew, a geophysicist at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, who wrote the 2024 Nature paper projecting a negative leap second in 2029. Rather than advocating for frequent and random adjustments of a second, Agnew favors the idea of waiting a century, then making one big adjustment because preparations could be made well ahead of time.
This idea has had support for a while. In 2022 parties to the international General Conference on Weights and Measures voted to stop making leap-second adjustments by 2035. After that, timekeepers might agree to a fix every 20 years or perhaps every 100. Whatever the choice, “we want consistency,”says physicist Elizabeth Donley, chief of the time and frequency division at NIST. “Time is the most important unit in the international system of units; a lot of other standards depend on it.”
Some large Internet providers already follow their own protocols. Rather than waiting for any leaps, Google “smears” its clocks by thousandths of a second once every day.Such independent efforts don’t seem to cause any global discontinuities, but if more and more large entities start winging it, “that becomes anarchy,”Donley says.
Waiting decades for a well-planned adjustment means astronomical (rotational) time, known as UT1, will diverge more widely from the coordinated universal time (UTC) that is based on atomic clocks. But Donley doesn’t think problems will arise. “Computer networks,” she says, “don’t care where the sun is in the sky.”
Peter Thirolf, Benedict Seiferle and Lars von der Wense describe how recent progress in understanding thorium’s nuclear structure, and new upcoming results, could enable an ultra-accurate nuclear clock with applications in fundamental physics.
On time An artist’s rendition of a nuclear optical clock, which promises a relative accuracy of about 1 × 10–19. Credit: APS/Ann. Phys.531 1800381
For the past 60 years, the second has been defined in terms of atomic transitions between two hyperfine states of caesium-133. Such transitions, which correspond to radiation in the microwave regime, enable state-of-the art atomic clocks to keep time at the level of one second in more than 300 million years. A newer breed of optical clocks developed since the 2000s exploit frequencies that are about 105 times higher. While still under development, optical clocks based on aluminium ions are already reaching accuracies of about one second in 33 billion years, corresponding to a relative systematic frequency uncertainty below 1 × 10–18.
To further reduce these uncertainties, in 2003 Ekkehard Peik and Christian Tamm of Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt in Germany proposed the use of a nuclear instead of atomic transition for time measurements. Due to the small nuclear moments (corresponding to the vastly different dimensions of atoms and nuclei), and thus the very weak coupling to perturbing electromagnetic fields, a “nuclear clock” is less vulnerable to external perturbations. In addition to enabling a more accurate timepiece, this offers the potential for nuclear clocks to be used as quantum sensors to test fundamental physics.
Clockwork
A clock typically consists of an oscillator and a frequency-counting device. In a nuclear clock (see “Nuclear clock schematic” figure), the oscillator is provided by the frequency of a transition between two nuclear states (in contrast to a transition between two states in the electronic shell in the case of an atomic clock). For the frequency-counting device, a narrow-band laser resonantly excites the nuclear-clock transition, while the corresponding oscillations of the laser light are counted using a frequency comb. This device (the invention of which was recognised by the 2005 Nobel Prize in Physics) is a laser source whose spectrum consists of a series of discrete, equally spaced frequency lines. After a certain number of oscillations, given by the frequency of the nuclear transition, one second has elapsed.
Nuclear clock schematic A cavity-stabilised frequency comb (generated by laser 1) is adjusted to the nuclear excitation of 229Th. The excitation is detected by continuous monitoring of the hyperfine splitting of an atomic shell transition (laser 2). In the case of a nuclear excitation, this will change due to the different nuclear spins of ground and excited states. When laser 2 is in resonance with the shell transition, photons will be detected at the photomultiplier tube (PMT) and laser 1 will be stabilised to the nuclear transition via a feedback loop. The frequency of the exciting mode of the frequency comb can be counted precisely and serves as the clock signal. Source: Physik Journal19 6
The need for direct laser excitationstrongly constrains applicable nuclear-clock transitions: their energy has to be low enough to be accessible with existing laser technology, while simultaneously exhibiting a narrow linewidth. As the linewidth is determined by the lifetime of the excited nuclear state, the latter has to be long enough to allow for highly stable clock operation. So far, only the metastable (isomeric) first excited state of 229Th, denoted 229mTh, qualifies as a candidate for a nuclear clock, due to its exceptionally low excitation energy.
The existence of the isomeric state was conjectured in 1976 from gamma-ray spectroscopy of 229Th, and its excitation energy has only recently been determined to be 8.19 ± 0.12 eV (corresponding to a vacuum-ultraviolet wavelength of 151.4 ± 2.2 nm). Not only is it the lowest nuclear excitation among the roughly 184,000 excited states of the 3300 or so known nuclides, its expected lifetime is of the order of 1000 s, resulting in an extremely narrow relative linewidth (ΔE/E ~ 10–20) for its ground-state transition (see “Unique transition” figure). Besides high resilience against external perturbations, this represents another attractive property for a thorium nuclear clock.
Networks of ultra-precise synchronised nuclear clocks could enable a search for ultra light dark matter
Achieving optical control of the nuclear transition via a direct laser excitation would open a broad range of applications. A nuclear clock’s sensitivity to the gravitational redshift, which causes a clock’s relative frequency to change depending on its absolute height, could enable more accurate global positioning systems and high-sensitivity detections of fluctuations of Earth’s gravitational potential induced by seismic or tectonic activities. Furthermore, while the few-eV thorium transition emerges from a fortunate near-degeneracy of the two lowest nuclear-energy levels in 229Th, the Coulomb and strong-force contributions to these energies differ at the MeV level. This makes the nuclear-level structure of 229Th uniquely sensitive to variations of fundamental constants and ultralight dark matter. Many theories predict variations of the fine structure constant, for example, but on tiny yearly rates. The high sensitivity provided by the thorium isomer could allow such variations to be identified. Moreover, networks of ultra-precise synchronised clocks could enable a search for (ultra light) dark-matter signals.
Two different approaches have been proposed to realise a nuclear clock: one based on trapped ions and another using doped solid-state crystals. The first approach starts from individually trapped Th ions, which promises an unprecedented suppression of systematic clock-frequency shift and leads to an expected relative clock accuracy of about 1 × 10–19. The other approach relies on embedding 229Th atoms in a vacuum–ultraviolet (VUV) transparent crystal such as CaF2. This has the advantage of a large concentration (> 1015/cm3) of Th nuclei in the crystal, leading to a considerably higher signal-to-noise ratio and thus a greater clock stability.
Precise characterisation
A precise characterisation of the thorium isomer’s properties is a prerequisite for any kind of nuclear clock. In 2016 the present authors and colleagues made the
first direct identification of 229mTh by detecting electrons emitted from its dominant decay mode: internal-conversion (IC), whereby a nuclear excited state decays by the direct emission of one of its atomic electrons (see “Isomeric signal” figure). This brought the long-term objective of a nuclear clock into the focus of international research.
Currently, experimental access to 229mTh is possible only via radioactive decays of heavier isotopes or by X-ray pumping from higher-lying rotational nuclear levels, as shown by Takahiko Masuda and co-workers in 2019. The former, based on the alpha decay of 233U (2% branching ratio), is the most commonly used approach. Very recently, however, a promising new experiment exploiting β– decay from 229Ac was performed at CERN’s ISOLDE facility led by a team at KU Leuven. Here, 229Ac is online-produced and mass-separated before being implanted into a large-bandgap VUV-transparent crystal. In both population schemes, either photons or conversion electrons emitted during the isomeric decay are detected.
Isomeric signal Detection of the isomer’s decay via internal conversion (IC), showing the signal of the first direct detection of the 2229mTh decay. The plot shows the IC electron signal of 229mTh3+ ions, which were collected with low kinetic energy directly on the surface of a position-sensitive MCP detector. Source: Nature533 47
In the IC-based approach, a positively charged 229mTh ion beam is generated from alpha-decay daughter products recoiling off a 233U source placed inside a buffer-gas stopping cell. The decay products are thermalised, guided by electrical fields towards an exit nozzle, extracted into a longitudinally 15-fold segmented radiofrequency quadrupole (RFQ) that acts as an ion guide, phase-space cooler and optionally a beam buncher, followed by a quadrupole mass separator for beam purification. In charged thorium isomers, the otherwise dominant IC decay branch is energetically forbidden, leading to a prolongation of the lifetime by up to nine orders of magnitude.
Operating the segmented RFQ as a linear Paul trap to generate sharp ion pulses enables the half-life of the thorium isomer to be determined. In work performed by the present authors in 2017, pulsed ions from the RFQ were collected and neutralised on a metal surface, triggering their IC decay. Since the long ionic lifetime was inaccessible due to the limited ion-storage time imposed by the trap’s vacuum conditions, the drastically reduced lifetime of neutral isomers was targeted. Time-resolved detection of the low-energy conversion electrons determined the lifetime to be 7 ± 1 μs.
Excitation energy
Recently, considerable progress has been made in determining the 229mTh excitation energy – a milestone en route to a nuclear clock. In general, experimental approaches to determine the excitation energy fall into three categories: indirect measurements via gamma-ray spectroscopy of energetically low-lying rotational transitions in 229Th; direct spectroscopy of fluorescence photons emitted in radiative decays; and via electrons emitted in the IC decay of neutral 229mTh. The first approach led to the conjecture of the isomer’s existence and finally, in 2007, to the long-accepted value of 7.6 ± 0.5 eV. The second approach tries to measure the energy of photons emitted directly in the ground-state decay of the thorium isomer.
Unique transition Isomeric nuclear levels (purple circles) exhibit typical energies from a few 10 keV to several MeV. Only two low-energy (< 1 keV) nuclear isomers are known: 229mTh (8.19 eV, purple bar) and 235mU (76.7 eV). Due to the long radiative lifetime of 235mU (of the order 1022 s), only 229mTh qualifies for a direct laser excitation and thus for the realisation of a nuclear clock. In addition, selected clock transitions are included (red circles), which are already in use for optical atomic clocks. Source: Nature533 47
The first direct measurement of the thorium isomer’s excitation energy was reported by the present authors and co-workers in 2019. Using a compact magnetic-bottle spectrometer equipped with a repulsive electrostatic potential, followed by a microchannel-plate detector, the kinetic energy of the IC electrons emitted after an in-flight neutralisation of Th ions emitted from a 233U source could be determined. The experiment provided a value for the excitation energy of the nuclear-clock transition of 8.28 ± 0.17 eV. At around the same time in Japan, Masuda and co-workers used synchrotron radiation to achieve the first population of the isomer via resonant X-ray pumping into the second excited nuclear state of 229Th at 29.19 keV, which decays predominantly into 229mTh. By combining their measurement with earlier published gamma-spectroscopic data, the team could constrain the isomeric excitation energy to the range 2.5–8.9 eV. More recently, led by teams at Heidelberg and Vienna, the excited isomers were implanted into the absorber of a custom-built cryogenic magnetic micro-calorimeter and the isomeric energy was measured by detecting the temperature-induced change of the magnetisation using SQUIDs. This produced a value of 8.10 ± 0.17 eV for the clock-transition energy, resulting in a world-average of 8.19 ± 0.12 eV.
Besides precise knowledge of the excitation energy, another prerequisite for a nuclear clock is the possibility to monitor the nuclear excitation on short timescales. Peik and Tamm proposed a method to do this in 2003 based on the “double resonance” principle, which requires knowledge of the hyperfine structure of the thorium isomer. Therefore, in 2018, two different laser beams were collinearly superimposed on the 229Th ion beam, initiating a two-step excitation in the atomic shell of 229Th. By varying both laser frequencies, resonant excitations of hyperfine components both of the 229Th ground state and the 229mTh isomer could be identified and thus the hyperfine splitting signature of both states could be established by detecting their de-excitation (see “Hyperfine splitting” figure). The eventual observation of the 229mTh hyperfine structure in 2018 not only will in the future allow a non-destructive verification of the nuclear excitation, but enabled the isomer’s magnetic dipole and electrical quadrupole moments, and the mean-square charge radius, to be determined.
Roadmap towards a nuclear clock
So far, the identification and characterisation of the thorium isomer has largely been driven by nuclear physics, where techniques such as gamma spectroscopy, conversion-electron spectroscopy and radioactive decays offer a description in units of electron volts. Now the challenge is to refine our knowledge of the isomeric excitation energy with laser-spectroscopic precision to enable optical control of the nuclear-clock transition. This requires bridging a gap of about 12 orders of magnitude in the precision of the 229mTh excitation energy, from around 0.1 eV to the sub-kHz regime. In a first step, existing broad-band laser technology can be used to localise the nuclear resonance with an accuracy of about 1 GHz. In a second step, using VUV frequency-comb spectroscopy presently under development, it is envisaged to improve the accuracy into the (sub-)kHz range.
Hyperfine splitting Left: the two-step excitation scheme for Doppler-free spectroscopy of 229Th2+. The 29,300 cm–1 line is excited by two lasers (purple and red) and fluorescence is registered. A third laser (blue) is used to control the number of ions stored in the Paul trap for normalisation purposes. Right: two-step excitation resonances of the 229Th nuclear isomer hyperfine splitting are displayed in cyan, showing the relative strengths and frequency range of the isomeric and ground-state resonances. The first laser is stabilised at around 260 MHz detuning with respect to the 229Th HFS centre and the second laser is scanned. The unlabelled peaks correspond to the ground state. Source: Nature556 321
Another practical challenge when designing a high-precision ion-trap-based nuclear clock is the generation of thermally decoupled, ultra-cold 229Th ions via laser cooling. 229Th3+ is particularly suited due to its electronic level structure, with only one valence electron. Due to the high chemical reactivity of thorium, a cryogenic Paul trap is the ideal environment for laser cooling, since almost all residual gas atoms will freeze out at 4 K, increasing the trapping time into the region of a few hours. This will form the basis for direct laser excitation of 229mTh and will also enable a measurement of the not yet experimentally determined isomeric lifetime of 229Th ions. For the alternative development of a compact solid-state nuclear clock it will be necessary to suppress the 229mTh decay via internal conversion in a large band-gap, VUV transparent crystal and to detect the γ decay of the excited nuclear state. Proof-of-principle studies of this approach are currently ongoing at ISOLDE.
Laser-spectroscopy activities on the thorium isomer are also ongoing in the US, for example at JILA, NIST and UCLA
Many of the recent breakthroughs in understanding the 229Th clock transition emerged from the European Union project “nuClock”, which terminated in 2019. A subsequent project, ThoriumNuclearClock (ThNC), aims to demonstrate at least one nuclear clock by 2026. Laser-spectroscopy activities on the thorium isomer are also ongoing in the US, for example at JILA, NIST and UCLA.
In view of the large progress in recent years and ongoing worldwide efforts both experimentally and theoretically, the road is paved towards the first nuclear clock. It will complement highly precise optical atomic clocks, while in some areas, in the long run, nuclear clocks might even have the potential to replace them. Moreover, and beyond its superb timekeeping capabilities, a nuclear clock is a unique type of quantum sensor allowing for fundamental physics tests, from the variation of fundamental constants to searches for dark matter.
Researchers are developing a nuclear clock using thorium and ultraviolet lasers, promising unprecedented precision in timekeeping. This could enhance GPS accuracy, internet speed, and secure communications, while also allowing for deeper insights into fundamental physics. (Artist’s concept.) Credit: SciTechDaily.com
An international team at JILA is pioneering a nuclear clock that surpasses current atomic clocks in precision, potentially enabling advancements in GPS, internet synchronization, and secure communications.
Their work, leveraging thorium nuclei and ultraviolet lasers, has also established a crucial link to existing atomic timekeeping systems, offering insights into the fundamental physics and the potential for more robust, portable clocks.
Revolutionizing Timekeeping: The Advent of Nuclear Clocks
The world keeps time with the ticks of atomic clocks, but a new type of clock under development — a nuclear clock — could revolutionize how we measure time and probe fundamental physics.
An international research team led by scientists at JILA, a joint institute of the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and the University of Colorado Boulder, has demonstrated key elements of a nuclear clock. A nuclear clock is a novel type of timekeeping device that uses signals from the core, or nucleus, of an atom.The team used a specially designed ultraviolet laser to precisely measure the frequency of an energy jump in thorium nuclei embedded in a solid crystal. They also employed an optical frequency comb, which acts like an extremely accurate light ruler, to count the number of ultraviolet wave cycles that create this energy jump.While this laboratory demonstration is not a fully developed nuclear clock, it contains all the core technology for one.
A powerful laser shines into a jet of gas, creating a bright plasma and generating ultraviolet light. The light leaves a visible white line as it interacts with leftover gas in the vacuum chamber. This process helps scientists precisely measure the energy needed to excite the thorium-229 nucleus, which is the core of a future nuclear clock. Credit: Chuankun Zhang/JILA
Enhanced Precision and Technology Integration
Nuclear clocks could be much more accurate than current atomic clocks, which provide official international time and play major roles in technologies such as GPS, internet synchronization, and financial transactions. For the general public, this development could ultimately mean even more precise navigation systems (with or without GPS), faster internet speeds, more reliable network connections, and more secure digital communications.
Beyond everyday technology, nuclear clocks could improve tests of fundamental theories for how the universe works, potentially leading to new discoveries in physics. They could help detect dark matter or verify if the constants of nature are truly constant, allowing for verification of theories in particle physics without the need for large-scale particle accelerator facilities.
Laser Precision in Timekeeping
Atomic clocks measure time by tuning laser light to frequencies that cause electrons to jump between energy levels. Nuclear clocks would utilize energy jumps within an atom’s tiny central region, known as the nucleus, where particles called protons and neutrons cram together.These energy jumps are much like flipping a light switch. Shining laser light with the exact amount of energy needed for this jump can flip this nuclear “switch.”
A nuclear clock would have major advantages for clock precision. Compared with the electrons in atomic clocks, the nucleus is much less affected by outside disturbances such as stray electromagnetic fields. The laser light needed to cause energy jumps in nuclei is much higher in frequency than that required for atomic clocks. This higher frequency — meaning more wave cycles per second — is directly related to a greater number of “ticks” per second and therefore leads to more precise timekeeping.
Challenges and Milestones in Development
But it is very hard to create a nuclear clock. To make energy jumps, most atomic nuclei need to be hit by coherent X-rays (a high-frequency form of light) with energies much greater than those that can be produced with current technology. So scientists have focused on thorium-229, an atom whose nucleus has a smaller energy jump than any other known atom, requiring ultraviolet light (which is lower in energy than X-rays).
In 1976, scientists discovered this thorium energy jump, known as a “nuclear transition” in physics language. In 2003, scientists proposed using this transition to create a clock, and they only directly observed it in 2016. Earlier this year, two different research teams used ultraviolet lasers they created in the lab to flip the nuclear “switch” and measure the wavelength of light needed for it.
Breakthroughs and Future Prospects
In the new work, the JILA researchers and their colleagues create all the essential parts of a clock: the thorium-229 nuclear transition to provide the clock’s “ticks,” a laser to create precise energy jumps between the individual quantum states of the nucleus, and a frequency comb for direct measurements of these “ticks.” This effort has achieved a level of precision that is one million times higher than the previous wavelength-based measurement. In addition, they compared this ultraviolet frequency directly to the optical frequency used in one of the world’s most accurate atomic clocks, which uses strontium atoms, establishing the first direct frequency link between a nuclear transition and an atomic clock. This direct frequency link and increase in precision are a crucial step in developing the nuclear clock and integrating it with existing timekeeping systems.
The research has already yielded unprecedented results, including the ability to observe details in the thorium nucleus’s shape that no one had ever observed before — it’s like seeing individual blades of grass from an airplane.
The team presented its results in the September 4 issue of the journal Nature as a cover story.
On the Horizon: Portable and Precise Timekeeping
While this isn’t yet a functioning nuclear clock, it’s a crucial step towards creating such a clock that could be both portable and highly stable. The use of thorium embedded in a solid crystal, combined with the nucleus’s reduced sensitivity to external disturbances, paves the way for potentially compact and robust timekeeping devices.
“Imagine a wristwatch that wouldn’t lose a second even if you left it running for billions of years,” said NIST and JILA physicist Jun Ye. “While we’re not quite there yet, this research brings us closer to that level of precision.”
Reference: “Frequency ratio of the 229mTh nuclear isomeric transition and the 87Sr atomic clock” by Chuankun Zhang, Tian Ooi, Jacob S. Higgins, Jack F. Doyle, Lars von der Wense, Kjeld Beeks, Adrian Leitner, Georgy A. Kazakov, Peng Li, Peter G. Thirolf, Thorsten Schumm and Jun Ye, 4 September 2024, Nature. DOI: 10.1038/s41586-024-07839-6
The research team included researchers from JILA, a joint institute of NIST and the University of Colorado Boulder; the Vienna Center for Quantum Science and Technology; and IMRA America, Inc.I
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I would love to know how many billions of dollars and thousands of man hours have been wasted on this research for a project that, by there own admission is not even necessary.
God’s Calendar does not rely on anything but His will. It fluctuates and changes at his leisure. He commands us to follow His plan for our time which is ruled by the Sun and Moon and Stars, which are ordered by HIM.
The World system, ruled by the Fallen Angels and their minions have established their own way of measuring Time. It is artificial. It is a device, a contrivance designed to turn humans into machines, slaving away to the tick tock beat and HELL’s Bells.
We live in a physical world with its four known space-time dimensions of length, width, height (or depth) and time. However, God dwells in a different realm—the spirit realm—beyond the perception of our physical senses. It’s not that God isn’t real; it’s a matter of His not being limited by the physical laws and dimensions that govern our world (Isaiah 57:15). Knowing that “God is spirit” (John 4:24), what is His relationship to time?
In Psalm 90:4, Moses used a simple yet profound analogy in describing the timelessness of God: “For a thousand years in Your sight are like a day that has just gone by, or like a watch in the night.” The eternity of God is contrasted with the temporality of man. Our lives are but short and frail, but God does not weaken or fail with the passage of time.
In a sense, the marking of time is irrelevant to God because He transcends it. Peter, in 2 Peter 3:8, cautioned his readers not to let this one critical fact escape their notice—that God’s perspective on time is far different from mankind’s (Psalm 102:12, 24-27). The Lord does not count time as we do. He is above and outside of the sphere of time.God sees all of eternity’s past and eternity’s future. The time that passes on earth is of no consequence from God’s timeless perspective. A second is no different from an eon; a billion years pass like seconds to the eternal God.
Though we cannot possibly comprehend this idea of eternity or the timelessness of God, we in our finite minds try to confine an infinite God to our time schedule. Those who foolishly demand that God operate according to their time frame ignore the fact that He is the “High and Lofty One . . . who lives forever” (Isaiah 57:15). This description of God is far removed from man’s condition: “The length of our days is seventy years—or eighty, if we have the strength; yet their span is but trouble and sorrow, for they quickly pass, and we fly away” (Psalm 90:10).
Again, because of our finite minds, we can only grasp the concept of God’s timeless existence in part. And in so doing, we describe Him as a God without a beginning or end, eternal, infinite, everlasting, etc. Psalm 90:2 declares, “From everlasting to everlasting You are God” (see also Psalm 93:2). He always was and always will be.
So, what is time? To put it simply, time is duration. Our clocks mark change or, more precisely, our timepieces are benchmarks of change that indicate the passage of time.We could say, then, that time is a necessary precondition for change and change is a sufficient condition to establish the passage of time. In other words, whenever there’s change of any kind we know that time has passed. We see this as we go through life, as we age. And we cannot recover the minutes that have passed by.
Additionally, the science of physics tells us that time is a property resulting from the existence of matter. As such, time exists when matter exists. But God is not matter; God, in fact, created matter.The bottom line is this: time began when God created the universe.Before that, God was simply existing. Since there was no matter, and because God does not change, time had no existence and therefore no meaning, no relation to Him.
And this brings us to the meaning of the word eternity.Eternity is a term used to express the concept of something that has no end and/or no beginning. God has no beginning or end, but He cannot be wholly defined by eternity, especially as a measure of time. (God is eternal, but eternity does not equal God. Similarly, God is all-powerful, but power does not equal God.) Eternity is one of God’s attributes, but, having created time, He is greater than time and exists outside of it.
Scripture reveals that God lives outside the bounds of time as we know it. Our destiny was planned “before the beginning of time” (2 Timothy 1:9; Titus 1:2) and “before the creation of the world” (Ephesians 1:4; 1 Peter 1:20). “By faith we understand that the universe was formed at God’s command, so that what is seen was not made out of what was visible” (Hebrews 11:3). In other words, the physical universe we see, hear, feel and experience was created not from existing matter, but from a source independent of the physical dimensions we can perceive.
“God is spirit” (John 4:24), and, correspondingly, God is timeless rather than being eternally in time or being beyond time. Time was simply created by God as a limited part of His creation for accommodating the workings of His purpose in His disposable universe (see 2 Peter 3:10-12).
Upon the completion of His creation activity, including the creation of time, what did God conclude? “God saw all that he had made, and it was very good” (Gen 1:31). Indeed, God is spirit in the realm of timelessness, rather than flesh in the sphere of time.
As believers, we have a deep sense of comfort knowing that God, though timeless and eternal, is in time with us right now; He is not unreachably transcendent, but right here in this moment with us. And because He’s in this moment, He can respond to our needs and prayers.
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1 John 1:5 This is the message we have heard from Him and announce to you, that God is Light, and in Him there is no darkness at all.
1 In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth.
2 And the earth was without form, and void; and darkness was upon the face of the deep. And the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters.
3 And God said, Let there be light: and there was light. obviously, He created a light separate from Himself who is Light. This He did on the First day of the Creation we call Earth.
4 And God saw the light, that it was good: and God divided the light from the darkness. So, GOD caused or created the difference between Light and Darkness on the Earth.
5 And God called the light Day, and the darkness he called Night.And the evening and the morning were the first day.
6 And God said, Let there be a firmament in the midst of the waters, and let it divide the waters from the waters.
7 And God made the firmament, and divided the waters which were under the firmament from the waters which were above the firmament: and it was so.
8 And God called the firmament Heaven. And the evening and the morning were the second day.
9 And God said, Let the waters under the heaven be gathered together unto one place, and let the dry land appear: and it was so.
10 And God called the dry land Earth; and the gathering together of the waters called he Seas: and God saw that it was good.
11 And God said, Let the earth bring forth grass, the herb yielding seed, and the fruit tree yielding fruit after his kind, whose seed is in itself, upon the earth: and it was so.
12 And the earth brought forth grass, and herb yielding seed after his kind, and the tree yielding fruit, whose seed was in itself, after his kind: and God saw that it was good.
13 And the evening and the morning were the third day. This he did on the third day. He browght forth life in the form of plants yielding fruit before he even created the Sun. So, obviously God has sources of energy and light unrelated to the Sun or Moon or Stars.
14 And God said, Let there be lights in the firmament of the heaven to divide the day from the night; and let them be for signs, and for seasons, and for days, and years:
15 And let them be for lights in the firmament of the heaven to give light upon the earth: and it was so.
16 And God made two great lights; the greater light to rule the day, and the lesser light to rule the night: he made the stars also.
17 And God set them in the firmament of the heaven to give light upon the earth,
18 And to rule over the day and over the night, and to divide the light from the darkness:and God saw that it was good. All the Stars and Wandering Stars known to us as Planets GOD placed in the firmament over our heads which He named Heaven.
19 And the evening and the morning were the fourth day.
20 And God said, Let the waters bring forth abundantly the moving creature that hath life, and fowl that may fly above the earth in the open firmament of heaven.
21 And God created great whales, and every living creature that moveth, which the waters brought forth abundantly, after their kind, and every winged fowl after his kind: and God saw that it was good.
22 And God blessed them, saying, Be fruitful, and multiply, and fill the waters in the seas, and let fowl multiply in the earth.
23 And the evening and the morning were the fifth day.
24 And God said, Let the earth bring forth the living creature after his kind, cattle, and creeping thing, and beast of the earth after his kind: and it was so.
25 And God made the beast of the earth after his kind, and cattle after their kind, and every thing that creepeth upon the earth after his kind: and God saw that it was good.
26 And God said, Let us make man in our image, after our likeness: and let them have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over the cattle, and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth.
27 So God created man in his own image, in the image of God created he him; male and female created he them.
28 And God blessed them, and God said unto them, Be fruitful, and multiply, and replenish the earth, and subdue it: and have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over every living thing that moveth upon the earth.
29 And God said, Behold, I have given you every herb bearing seed, which is upon the face of all the earth, and every tree, in the which is the fruit of a tree yielding seed; to you it shall be for meat.
30 And to every beast of the earth, and to every fowl of the air, and to every thing that creepeth upon the earth, wherein there is life, I have given every green herb for meat: and it was so.
31 And God saw every thing that he had made, and, behold, it was very good. And the evening and the morning were the sixth day.
Timeis a concept deeply rooted in the Bible, carrying significant symbolism and meaning throughout its verses. In this article, we will delve into the Biblical perspectiveof time, exploring how it reflects God’s eternal natureand His divine plan for humanity. As Ecclesiastes 3:1 tells us, “
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There is a time for everything, and a season for every activity under the heavens.
” Time serves as a tool in God’s hands to fulfill His promises and bring about His redemptive plan. Through examining various Biblical passages and stories, we will uncover the deeper significance of time as a vessel for God’s grace and mercy. Join us on this soul-enriching journey through the timeless wisdom of the Word of God.
The Biblical Meaning of Time
Time is a concept that has fascinated humanity since the beginning of existence.In the Bible, time holds significant spiritual and symbolic meaning, reflecting God’s eternal nature and His divine plan for humanity.
Psalm 90:12
“Teach us to number our days aright—that we may gain a heart of wisdom” is a phrase from Psalm 90:12. It is a prayer asking God to help us use our time wisely and to live each day with faithfulness. The phrase reminds us that our days are numbered and that only God knows the length of them for each and every one of us.Source
Time as a Gift from God
Time is a precious gift from God,a resource that should be carefully stewarded and utilized for His glory.In the book of Ecclesiastes, we are reminded that there is a time for everything under heaven, highlighting the importance of each moment in God’s grand design.
“He has made everything beautiful in its time.” Ecclesiastes 3:11
Time as a Reflection of God’s Faithfulness
God’s faithfulness is evident throughout history, as He fulfills His promises in His perfect timing.The Bible tells us that God is the Alpha and the Omega, the beginning and the end, emphasizing His eternal presence and sovereignty over time.
“But do not overlook this one fact, beloved, that with the Lord one day is as a thousand years, and a thousand years as one day.” 2 Peter 3:8
Time as a Tool for Spiritual Growth
Time allows us the opportunity to grow in our relationship with God, to seek Him daily, and to align our lives with His will. It is a reminder that our time on earth is temporary, urging us to live with purpose and intentionality, focusing on eternity rather than the temporary pleasures of this world.
“Teach us to number our days, that we may gain a heart of wisdom.” Psalm 90:12
Time as a Call to Action
As Christians, we are called to make the most of our time on earth, using it to spread the love of Christ, serve others, and fulfill the Great Commission. Our time is a valuable resource that can be used to impact eternity, leaving a lasting legacy of faith and love.
“Look carefully then how you walk, not as unwise but as wise, making the best use of the time, because the days are evil.” Ephesians 5:15-16
Conclusion
Time is a gift from God, a reflection of His faithfulness, a tool for spiritual growth, and a call to actionfor all believers. May we be good stewards of the time we have been given, using it wisely to honor and glorify God in all that we do.
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IF they could TURN BACK TIME the ruling elite would take us back to the Middle Ages!
RESTORED 5/24/23 TAGS: NEW WORLD ORDER, Joe Biden, Age of Scarcity, Poverty, Famine, draconian measures, simplicity, Constitutional System of Government, New Age, Technology, redistribution of wealth, death of civilization, Fuedal System, climate change, private property, Environmental Crisis, Middle Ages, Black Death, medieval elites, Marxist-Communist Rule, Federal Reserve, Klaus Schwab, Great Reset, Tax Burder, IMF, UN, … Click Here to Read More