Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

New Clock May End Time As We Know It

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • New Clock May End Time As We Know It

    "My own personal opinion is that time is a human construct," says Tom O'Brian. O'Brian has thought a lot about this over the years. He is America's official timekeeper at the National Institute of Standards and Technology in Boulder, Colorado.

    To him, days, hours, minutes and seconds are a way for humanity to "put some order in this very fascinating and complex universe around us."

    This new clock can sense the pace of time speeding up as it moves inch by inch away from the earth's core.

    ...

    That's a problem, because to actually use time, you need different clocks to agree on the time. Think about it: If I say, 'let's meet at 3:30,' we use our watches. But imagine a world in which your watch starts to tick faster, because you're working on the floor above me. Your 3:30 happens earlier than mine, and we miss our appointment.

    This clock works like that. Tiny shifts in the earth's crust can throw it off, even when it's sitting still. Even if two of them are synchronized, their different rates of ticking mean they will soon be out of synch. They will never agree.
    Scientists working to create the perfect atomic clock have a fundamental problem: Right now, on the ceiling, time is passing just a bit faster than it is on the floor.
    I'm not expecting to grow flowers in the desert...

  • #2
    i heard that story this morning. it's interesting, in a nerdy way, but it's a bit constructed.

    for all practical purposes, over our lifetime (and in all places any of us would ever visit), time is constant.
    "Instead of all of this energy and effort directed at the war to end drugs, how about a little attention to drugs which will end war?" Albert Hofmann

    Comment


    • #3
      "My own personal opinion is that time is a human construct," says Tom O'Brian. O'Brian has thought a lot about this over the years.

      Comment

      Working...
      X