Japan puts world’s most accurate clock on sale for US$3.3mil

Japan puts world’s most accurate clock on sale for US$3.3mil

The machine is so precise that it would take 10 billion years for it to deviate by one second.

Aether clock OC 020 Reuters 050325
The ‘Aether clock OC 020’ is 100 times more accurate than caesium atomic clocks. (The Yomiuri Shimbun/Reuters pic)
TOKYO:
Resembling a squat, wide fridge, the world’s most accurate clock went on sale for US$3.3 million in Japan today.

The “Aether clock OC 020” is so precise that it would take 10 billion years for it to deviate by one second, according to its Kyoto-based manufacturer Shimadzu Corp.

Known as a “strontium optical lattice clock”, it is 100 times more accurate than caesium atomic clocks, the current standard for defining seconds, the precision-equipment producer said in a statement.

The machine, a box around 1m tall, is small for its kind with a volume of around 250l.

It can also be used in research fieldwork.

Shimadzu is aiming to sell 10 of its clocks over the next three years and hopes its customers will use them to advance scientific research in areas such as the observation of tectonic activity.

Optical lattice clocks have previously been installed in Tokyo’s famous Skytree to test the general theory of relativity, which states that “time flows more slowly in places with strong gravity”.

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