Industries such as metrology, aerospace and defense need ultra-stable timing for accurate data collection and reliable communication Adtran’s Oscilloquartz optical cesium clock now features the ESTU ...
Ultra precise Chinese lattice clock joins international system, challenging decades of US dominance in global timekeeping ...
In a telecommunications network, every network element with synchronous intermachine links requires proper synchronization to minimize transport errors. A good example of synchronization is a network ...
2005 marks the 50th anniversary of the cesium atomic clock. In 1955, Dr. Louis Essen and Jack Perry developed the first accurate cesium atomic clock at the National ...
With a new and improved atomic clock, the standard of time in America is about to change -- a teeny, tiny bit. For the first time in 15 years, the National Institute of Standards and Technology, or ...
IIIF provides researchers rich metadata and media viewing options for comparison of works across cultural heritage collections. Visit the IIIF page to learn more. The 5071A Cesium Primary Frequency ...
Precision synchronization technology is crucial for scientific measurement applications A renowned national authority on metrology based in Central Europe has conducted a rigorous evaluation of the ...
METAS needed a precise, reliable timing solution to complete its infrastructure, realize the Swiss national timescale UTC (CH) and optimally contribute to the realization of UTC Adtran’s OSA 3300 HP ...
A new atomic clock will keep data center equipment precisely synchronized for months, if global time services including GPS are unavailable or blocked. The 5071B cesium atomic clock from Microchip ...
No audio available for this content. Photo: ADVA ADVA has launched a ePRC optical cesium atomic clock solution to protect synchronization networks during GNSS disruptions. The OSA 3350 ePRC+ offers ...
You’ve given some thought to oxygen, carbon, uranium. But you’ve probably never mused about the element ytterbium, symbol Yb. A new study by scientists at the National Institute of Standards and ...
My next book, due out in late January, is called A Brief History of Timekeeping, and covers at least 5,000 years of the science and technology humans have used to track the time. When I cite that ...