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Narrower Lasers Could Yield Better Atomic Clocks

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Atomic clocks lose 1 second every 300 million years, but that level of accuracy isn’t good enough for researchers at the Niels Bohr Institute. For even better precision, they’ve devised a new way to narrow the linewidth of the red lasers that excite the electrons that function as their clock’s pendulum. Typical resonators used to stabilize lasers still produce some noise because of the vibrations of the atoms that make up their mirrors. Doctoral student Bjarke Takashi Rojle Christensen works in the quantum optics laboratory at the Niels Bohr Institute....Read full article

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    Published: March 2015
    Glossary
    laser cooling
    Laser cooling is a technique used to reduce the temperature of a material or a collection of atoms or molecules by using laser light. It is based on the principle of selective absorption and emission of photons by atoms or molecules. In laser cooling, specially tuned laser beams are directed at the material or atoms. When these atoms absorb photons from the laser light, they gain momentum in the direction of the laser beam due to the momentum carried by the photons. However, according to...
    atomic clock
    An atomic clock is a highly precise timekeeping device that uses the vibrations or oscillations of atoms as a reference for measuring time. The most common type of atomic clock uses the vibrations of atoms, typically cesium or rubidium atoms, to define the length of a second. The principle behind atomic clocks is based on the fundamental properties of atoms, which oscillate at extremely stable and predictable frequencies. The primary concept employed in atomic clocks is the phenomenon of...
    Research & TechnologyEuropeDenmarkUniversity of CopenhagenNiels Bohr InstituteJan ThomsenLaserslaser coolingMaterialsatomic clockTech PulseEuro News

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