Time for a New Article on Time

New Calculations on Blackbody Energy Set the Stage for Clocks With Unprecedented Accuracy

Even a completely isolated atom senses the temperature of its environment. Just as heat swells the air in a hot-air balloon, so-called “blackbody radiation” (BBR) enlarges the size of the electron clouds within the atom, though to a much lesser degree — by one part in a hundred trillion, a size that poses a severe challenge to precision measurement.

Um, not quite. This analogy is drawing a Bohr-atom-esque analogy between orbit size and energy and implying that this due to some ideal gas behavior (hey, things expand when they’re hot!). The effect here is called the AC Stark shift, aka the light-shift. When you interact with a system, the interaction shifts the location of the energy levels in the system. This is a big problem in any precision experiment where the effect in question depends on the energy difference between the states, and the second is defined in those terms — 9192631770 Hz is the defined difference between the two hyperfine ground states, in complete theoretical isolation, and this holds true for any transition one might use, including the “you can call me Al+” device in the article. Any interaction with the atoms shifts those energy levels, so you have to know what the interaction is in order to allow you to measure that shift. That includes static magnetic and electric fields (the Zeeman and DC Stark shifts); oscillating fields in the form of EM radiation are also a problem. This is why atomic clocks which use lasers have to turn those lasers off when the atoms are “ticking” — the perturbation is huge. Simply accounting for it is not an option, because it depends on the intensity, so the shift would depend on how well you could servo the intensity of the laser light, and the answer is not “nearly well enough to do a part in 10^18 measurement” by many orders of magnitude.

As the articles mentions, blackbody radiation from, well, everything, is present, too. The walls emit radiation, you emit radiation; room-temperature-ish thing radiate most strongly near about 10 microns but the peak of the distribution depends on the temperature, which is exploited in thermal imaging. There were a few talks on the BBR effects at the Frequency/Timing conference I recently attended in San Francisco, including this one, though this result is quoted from its presentation at a different conference. The Blackbody radiation shift is one of the larger errors in any frequency standard; while one can measure the temperature of the vacuum system pretty well, what radiation profile the atoms actually see is not something that is known quite as well. Nothing is a true blackbody, and even though you’ve shut lasers off, windows in your system can let in thermal radiation from the outside. And then there’s the theory, which probably needs to include several orders of effects involving multiple energy states in order to be useful at this level. This was the nail sticking up in the error budgets of the frequency standards, so it’s not surprising that it is the one getting hammered down in recent theoretical and experimental work.

The problem I have with the imagery is twofold. First, the generic “atom gets bigger” picture runs counter to the deBroglie wavelength argument. That atom really isn’t hotter, since it’s not in thermal equilibrium with the radiation (a single atom can’t have a temperature, anyway), but an atom in a cold ensemble is bigger, because it has a smaller momentum, and hotter atoms get smaller in that regard. Second, the AC Stark shift is a tad more complicated than is described here. In an interaction with a two-state system (1 and 2, with 2 having a higher energy) it will indeed lower |1> and raise |2>, if you are shining radiation that is near that resonance. But |2> is a nominally unoccupied state. Even in the Bohr picture, that state isn’t what you think of when you look at the size of an orbit. The ground state, which is being pushed down to a lower energy, is what we naively use. In real atoms, with multiple states, the picture is much more complicated (and why the theory is as well). The direction of the shift on a state depends on the frequency of the light relative to the transition. If you consider a three-level system, the shift in the |2> state can be in the opposite direction of the shift in |3>, which happens if you tune the laser to a higher frequency than the 1—>2 transition. (There is a class of frequency standards using optical lattices where you choose the light frequency to exactly match the size of the shifts, so that frequency difference of the 1—>2 transition is unaffected.) Saying that BBR makes electron clouds bigger is just wrong.

I have another nit, related to the usual “this is a frequency standard, not a clock” disclaimer:

This quantum-logic clock, based on atomic energy levels in the aluminum ion, Al+, has an uncertainty of 1 second per 3.7 billion years, translating to 1 part in 8.6 x 10-18, due to a number of small effects that shift the actual tick rate of the clock.

This is backwards. The thing you can measure is the short-term stability, i.e. the frequency stability at short times (e.g. at one second, or at some later time when the measurement stops integrating down due to the systematic errors) is the value that can be determined by your experiment, and the time stability is extrapolated, Disco-Stu style (if these trends continue…). The reality that this experiment probably ran for a few hours at best. When it was shut off, the stability of the timing system reverted to whatever the stability of the other clocks was.

Fun With Dick and Jane's Bar-Graph Software

Even More Fun With Charts: Making the Poor Look Rich

Lies, damned lies and statistics brought to life in the tale of three bar graphs.

From one of the included links

[I]f you add up all the lines of income over $200,000, you get around $2 trillion. (I may be off, because I’m eyeballing it, but I’m not off by much.) That obviously far exceeds the nearly $1.4 trillion accruing to the $100-200,000 set. And it undermines rather than bolsters (though does not disprove) Reihan’s argument that “the collective political influence of the upper-middle-class is greater than that of the ultra-rich.”

And it’s true that the collective influence of the middle class is greater than that of the rich. If our foundational principles included “one economic class, one vote,” there might be a point to the WSJ graph. But since it’s one person, one vote, you have to normalize the income by the number of people.

Title Research Could Someday Lead to Article Titles Which Do Not Make Misleading Dramatic Claims!

… but this would violate the second law of journalism (sensationalism can never spontaneously decrease), so it will probably never happen.

Antihydrogen could lead to antigravity

Scientist also want to find out if the anti-atoms exhibit antigravity effects. This would mean the atoms would fall up instead of down. Since this would be a violation of the law of conservation of energy it is unlikely, however many scientist still find the idea worth exploring.

IOW, antihydrogen could lead to antigravity if some well-established physical principle turns out to be wrong. It hasn’t been ruled out, so it’s technically not a lie, but amore accurate title like “Gravity properties of antihydrogen to be tested” is way too boring for an article that’s not about bat-boy or some new diet. Which it could be — they could have gone with “Shed ten pounds with new antihydrogen diet!” Boy did they ever blow it on this one.

Pair of Ducks? No, it's a Buttered Cat!

The Buttered Cat Paradox

Those who have tackled the problem as a thought experiment (meaning, no cats were harmed) have come to the conclusion that the buttered cat would stop falling at some point above the floor. Then, as the cat tries to orient its feet against the attraction of the butter to the floor, the cat would begin spinning -and never stop. The result could be called a true perpetual motion machine.

The claim is that the kinetic energy of the buttered (or jellied) cat is converted into rotational energy as the cat hovers; in that sense it is not necessarily an over-unity device since the cat could then slow down as you tapped into that energy.

Score…a Direct Hit!

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Comet hits and there is a coronal mass ejection. Acausal, though.

NASA’s Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) spotted the ill-fated comet diving toward the sun between Tuesday and Wednesday (May 10 and 11), never to be seen again.

By coincidence, a massive explosion on the sun called a coronal mass ejection also erupted at about the same time.

See Sack

Not sure why the Chip-Scale Atomic Clock (CSAC) is making news again; this seems to be a rehash of news from January, but it’s an opportunity to make a few comments.

One of the sessions I attended at the recent timing conference discussed some of the pros and cons of the new competitors to the traditional quartz oscillator, one being the CSAC and the other being microelectromechanical systems (MEMS). CSACs have a niche because of the desire to optimize on several variables such as cost, power, stability, and startup requirements. A good quartz oscillator, for example, needs a relatively long warmup time, and the ones with good stability are expensive and tend to drift a bit. So there’s room to beat it on some variables, depending on what the user needs vs. what s/he doesn’t care about, e.g. power and size are variables that matter for a portable system but not for a server rack.

One of the observation is that CSACs could soon find their way into computers tied into ultra-high speed networks, because the clock performance becomes a limiting factor in data transfer — you can send data at a higher frequency and you spend less time re-synchronizing the clocks.

Another observation was a reminder that DARPA is currently funding another program to drive the size and power down even further.

Hotels are Going All Hitchhiker

They want to know where their towel is. All of their towels.

RFID Tags Protecting Hotel Towels

A more recent system, still not widespread, is to embed washable RFID chips into the towels and track them that way. The one data point I have for this is an anonymous Hawaii hotel that claims they’ve reduced towel theft from 4,000 a month to 750, saving $16,000 in replacement costs monthly.

Don’t steal any more Beverly Palm Hotel robes, Axel Foley.

Like a Frightened Turtle

Skulls in the Stars: It’s not shrinkage — it’s relativity! (1889)

Einstein’s revelations were preceded by some twenty years of gradual progress, during which time researchers put forth tantalizing hypotheses that came closer and closer to the truth.

One such discovery was made in 1889 by George FitzGerald. To explain a seemingly incomprehensible experimental result, he suggested that objects in motion shrink along their direction of travel. In this post, we will discuss what is now known as the FitzGerald-Lorentz length contraction and explain how FitzGerald fell short of the astonishing ideas that would be conceived by Einstein.

Booby Cam!

I hear they’re think of doing this for tits as well.

Booby Cams Capture Young Seabird Social Lives

Miniature video cameras strapped to the backs of young brown boobies allow researchers to watch how they learn from other seabirds.

The video cameras captured footage of them chasing other juveniles and following adults to feeding areas. The juvenile boobies also mingled with other seabird species, like brown noddies, streaked shearwaters and black-naped terns.