Defining 1 Second: The History and Science Behind Time Measurement

  • B
  • Thread starter Pedroski55
  • Start date
  • Tags
    Time
In summary: It's a pun.If there is a relationship between the time it takes for the Earth to circle the sun and the time between the oscillations of cesium 133, it is a very small one.
  • #1
Pedroski55
12
3
Hi,

I'm wondering about time. Time is very important in physics.

It seems we inherited the idea of 60 minutes in an hour from the Babylonians. I don't know if the Babylonians were even interested in minutes, let alone seconds, probably not.

Later on, we needed more accuracy, I suppose it seemed natural to divide 1 minute into 60 seconds, rather than 100 or 10.

Mechanical clocks came and went, then came the quartz crystal clock. Shock a quartz crystal and it will vibrate. A quartz crystal tuning fork is skimmed until it vibrates at 32768 oscillations a second. 32768 = 2 to the power of 15. Run through a flip-flop array, this may be reduced to 1 pulse per second.

Now, it appears to me , I could easily be wrong, that this is a chicken or egg situation: frequency is vibrations per second.

If I know what a second is, I can skim my tuning fork to vibrate at exactly this frequency. Or I define 32768 vibrations of my tuning fork as 1 second. (Accurate enough for most purposes, but prone to environmental influences.)

I hear even atomic clocks use a quartz crystal as initial impulse giver, then 9 192 631 770 oscillations of a Caesium 133 atom = 1 second.

Which came first, the chicken or the egg? The second or the quartz crystal tuning fork?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
  • #2
The first quartz clock was built in 1927. The first clock measuring seconds was built in 1570 or so. Even the SI second was first defined in 1889.
 
  • Like
Likes vanhees71, Pedroski55, russ_watters and 1 other person
  • #3
Pedroski55 said:
Which came first, the chicken or the egg? The second or the quartz crystal tuning fork?
The second came first, then the clock (caesium), then the second was redefined based on the clock.
 
  • Like
Likes vanhees71 and Pedroski55
  • #4
Isn't this one of those things that only seems like a chicken and egg if you mix unit systems?

Old style, a second is 1/86400 days. This turned out not to be a precise enough definition for modern purposes because day length varies, so we found a more stable basic time unit, the emissions of Caesium, and defined a new style second in terms of those. So that nobody except metrology nerds needed to care about the redefinition, the new style second is defined so that (for as many practical purposes as possible) it's the same size as an old style second within tolerance.

So this is not circular. There are two completely separate definitions of the second, one based on fractions of the rotation period of the Earth and one on multiples of the vibration period of Caesium. The modern one was chosen to match the old one, but if we'd been willing to pay the price in confusion we could have defined it otherwise.
 
  • Like
Likes vanhees71 and Pedroski55
  • #5
Ibix said:
So this is not circular. There are two completely separate definitions of the second, one based on fractions of the rotation period of the Earth and one on multiples of the vibration period of Caesium.
I don't know, seems very circular to me? :wink:
 
  • Like
  • Skeptical
Likes jbriggs444, Motore and Pedroski55
  • #6
Thank you all very much! I am the wiser!

Wouldn't happen to have a link or info on how, in practice, one catches, measures or reads the oscillations of caesium 133?? That's a very high frequency!
 
  • #7
Pedroski55 said:
Thank you all very much! I am the wiser!

Wouldn't happen to have a link or info on how, in practice, one catches, measures or reads the oscillations of caesium 133?? That's a very high frequency!
I typed "how does a caesium clock work" into Google and found this:

https://science.howstuffworks.com/atomic-clock3.htm
 
  • Like
Likes vanhees71 and Dale
  • #9
Mayhem said:
I don't know, seems very circular to me? :wink:
As of 1960 the definition was elliptical, not circular.
 
  • Like
  • Informative
Likes vanhees71 and nasu
  • #10
Prior to 1967 one second of time was defined by international agreement as 1/31,556,925.9747 of the time it took Earth to orbit the Sun.

In 1967 a second was redefined as 9,192,631,770 oscillations of the Cesium-133 atom.
 
  • Like
Likes vanhees71
  • #11
Mayhem said:
I don't know, seems very circular to me? :wink:
So you believe that there is a relationship between the time it takes for the Earth to circle the sun and the time between the oscillations of cesium 133 ?
 
  • Like
Likes vanhees71 and Vanadium 50
  • #12
phinds said:
So you believe that there is a relationship between the time it takes for the Earth to circle the sun and the time between the oscillations of cesium 133 ?
No, but for n = 4, I can conclude that 1 in 2 people got the joke.
 
  • #13
phinds said:
So you believe that there is a relationship between the time it takes for the Earth to circle the sun and the time between the oscillations of cesium 133 ?
There used to be in 1967. The two would have diverged slightly in the 54 years that have passed since they redefined the definition of a second.
 
  • #14
libertyk said:
There used to be in 1967. The two would have diverged slightly in the 54 years that have passed since they redefined the definition of a second.
You completely missed the point.
 
  • #15
"this is a chicken or egg situation"
Obquote: "What is time to a chicken?" -Roy Blunt, Jr.

GPS satellites have to keep a different time. Is the difference in time on Earth vs time in Earth orbit due to relativity or gravity? I read that one second to an observer near the center of a black hole, is a billion years to an observer on Earth, a different frame of reference. Does suggests a relationship between time and gravity ?
 
  • #16
General relativity describes how gravity is entirely a feature of space-time geometry. It accurately describes the relationship between time and gravity.

At a popular science level, the effect of relativity on GPS satellites can be split into two parts. There is a "special relativity" part which is due to the velocity of the moving satellite in a reference frame where the Earth is stationary -- fast clocks run slow. Then there is a "general relativity" part which is due to gravitational time dilation -- low clocks run slow.

[At a more advanced level, both the "special relativity" and "general relativity" effects are part and parcel of general relativity. The two can be split out and computed separately when gravity is weak and linear approximations are valid. When gravity is stronger, the non-linear nature of general relativity becomes important and more difficult calculations are required]

The two effects act in opposite directions. The gravitational effect wins by 38 microseconds per day. You can Google up tons of articles on this at various levels of sophistication.

For an observer near the center (the "singularity") of a black hole, the notion of time dilation is not really sensible because time dilation depends on a synchronization definition and there is no single "correct" one to choose. For hovering observers outside the event horizon, there is a natural synchronization standard to use. Using that standard, arbitrarily great time dilation ratios can exist as the horizon is approached more and more closely.

None of this has anything much to do with the definition of the second. Further discussion belongs in the Relativity forum instead.
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Likes vanhees71 and dextercioby
  • #17
Pedroski55 said:
That's a very high frequency!
It wasn't chosen on the basis of its frequency. It was chosen for repeatability. The atomic resonance is the same wherever you are or whoever is 'making' the reference clock. Some atoms are, comparatively 'all over the place' Some may be very consistent but hard to engineer into a reliable time reference.

We could be having a similar conversation about the metre. It's no longer defined in terms of a standard length of platinum in Paris but in terms of how far light will travel in a particular timed. Time is such a reliable quantity to measure - your digital watch is pretty good and you can get timing accuracy to many orders of magnitude better than that. You could cry 'circular argument' again and get the same reply here.

Afaik, they are still trying to get a better way of defining the kilogram than a standard lump of platinum in France. One approach is based on collecting a large (known) number of atoms of one isotope of an element and calling that the kilo but there's a problem with getting the reference mass pure enough. You need a substantial number of atoms to give better accuracy than the platinum kgs. When I last heard about it they were still working on it.
 
  • #18
sophiecentaur said:
Afaik, they are still trying to get a better way of defining the kilogram than a standard lump of platinum in France.
Actually, they redefined the kilogram in 2019. Now it is defined in terms of Planck's constant, just like the meter is defined in terms of the speed of light.
 
  • Like
Likes vanhees71 and dextercioby

1. What is the definition of a second?

A second is a unit of time that is equal to 1/60th of a minute or 1/3600th of an hour. It is the base unit of time in the International System of Units (SI) and is defined as the duration of 9,192,631,770 cycles of the radiation corresponding to the transition between two energy levels of the cesium-133 atom.

2. Who came up with the concept of a second?

The concept of a second was first introduced by the ancient Egyptians who divided the day into 24 hours, each hour into 60 minutes, and each minute into 60 seconds. However, the modern definition of a second was established in 1967 by the International System of Units (SI) based on the work of physicist Louis Essen and his colleagues.

3. How do we measure time accurately to the nanosecond?

To measure time accurately to the nanosecond, we use atomic clocks which are based on the oscillation of atoms. These clocks use the frequency of an atomic transition, such as the cesium-133 atom, to measure time. They are incredibly precise and can measure time to within one billionth of a second.

4. How has the measurement of time evolved throughout history?

The measurement of time has evolved significantly throughout history. Early civilizations used sundials and water clocks to measure time, while the first mechanical clocks were invented in the 14th century. The pendulum clock was then introduced in the 17th century, followed by the quartz clock in the 20th century. Today, we use atomic clocks for the most accurate measurement of time.

5. Why is it important to have a standard unit of time measurement?

A standard unit of time measurement is important for communication, commerce, and scientific research. It allows us to synchronize our activities and accurately measure the duration of events. Without a standard unit of time, it would be difficult to coordinate activities across different time zones and accurately compare data from different experiments.

Similar threads

Replies
3
Views
855
  • Special and General Relativity
2
Replies
51
Views
3K
  • Special and General Relativity
3
Replies
95
Views
4K
Replies
9
Views
3K
  • Other Physics Topics
2
Replies
56
Views
4K
  • Other Physics Topics
Replies
5
Views
2K
Replies
2
Views
2K
  • Other Physics Topics
Replies
4
Views
4K
  • General Discussion
2
Replies
57
Views
12K
  • Introductory Physics Homework Help
Replies
5
Views
5K
Back
Top