Breakthrough: Thorium Nuclear Clock | Podcast

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  • Опубликовано: 7 июл 2024
  • Time is used to set many standards by counting a periodic event with a known frequency. Eric Hudson, a professor in the department of physics and astronomy at UCLA, joins to discuss working to directly manipulate the energy level of an atomic nucleus using a laser, something that has never been done before and may result in the most accurate clocks ever.
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Комментарии • 19

  • @davidwilkie9551
    @davidwilkie9551 17 дней назад

    "We don't have a theory of it", which is good, because the experimental approach to measuring constants is only limited by the knowledge of QM-TIME logic of superimposed, frequency-amplitudes logarithmic condensation.
    It's a matter of seeing through the time-timing sync-duration Universal Positioning system of superimposed cycles of holography Circuitry. (Someone's got the tech from a crashed UAP tucked away, but need a tech support advisor to help)

  • @douginorlando6260
    @douginorlando6260 15 дней назад

    How accurate are the best clocks now? And how much more accurate a clock do you anticipate? And as this nuclear clock is refined, how accurate can it become?

  • @leonhardtkristensen4093
    @leonhardtkristensen4093 16 дней назад

    I found it very interesting and I believe I understood most of it. I have in the last few days been watching video's and studying cesium 137 clocks (the HP one) which has been a great help to understand this. My question now is thinking about Time Dilation does that bring down the scanned frequency of the absorbed or produces light to a lower frequency if the clock is moved at high speed?

  • @i-evi-l
    @i-evi-l 22 дня назад

    Wow thats wild. I dont even know when I subbed here but here we are.

  • @TheMemesofDestruction
    @TheMemesofDestruction 23 дня назад

    Go Science! ^.^

  • @XAirForce
    @XAirForce 11 дней назад

    I used to carry around a cesium beam clock in the missile field to insert time communications systems

    • @XAirForce
      @XAirForce 11 дней назад

      It’s kind of cool because too exciting The nucleus it takes a higher amount of energy, which is also related to why we buy us magnetic that we used to use to record audio, so that minor background interference would not affect the audio recording

    • @XAirForce
      @XAirForce 11 дней назад

      The crystal is just for the top of our magic sector. Lol

    • @XAirForce
      @XAirForce 11 дней назад

      Try to grow some of your crystals on an experiment that you put on the XB37

    • @XAirForce
      @XAirForce 11 дней назад

      Kind of looks like manufacturing this in space is exactly what you need considering you don’t need atmosphere and the sun is your vacume Ultraviolet light source for free.

    • @XAirForce
      @XAirForce 11 дней назад

      Hey, wait I think we’re about to get canceled. Isn’t this TikTok? Lol

  • @bearclawsarrow5319
    @bearclawsarrow5319 21 день назад

    The implications of this phenomena being controlled at a nuclear level is bonkers. Most transistors are the size of the thickness of a human hair. They've in essence made something that switches at a regular frequency when excited by a Lazer something that is 100,000 times smaller than the width of a human hair. Bruh
    Assuming I'm understanding this experiment and research right.

    • @CraftyF0X
      @CraftyF0X 16 дней назад

      Transistors on the nanometer scale bruh, do you have an idea how smaller that than hair ? But yea, nuclei is even a crapton smaller than that, you got that part right.

  • @educatedguest1510
    @educatedguest1510 19 дней назад

    Have you read "We Have Lost a Half of Solar Energy, the Half that We Never Had"?

  • @stewiesaidthat
    @stewiesaidthat 21 день назад

    Sundials are the most accurate time keeping device invented by man. The problem is, they lack precision. As precision goes up, accuracy goes down.

  • @youchwb6005
    @youchwb6005 23 дня назад +1

    I fell asleep after 2.5 minutes.