> Yes,  A story about time and frequency standards.  They actually used
> numbers like 10E16 in the story.  Apparently at that level your clock can
> measure a change in elevation of a few centimeters because of the
> relativistic effects of the reduced gravity field in just a few cm.

Hi Chris,

That's correct. When it comes to frequency standards the official SI second is 
defined only for sea level. We know time and frequency are "bent" by speed or 
gravity; time is the integral of frequency; and frequency is a function of 
height (h) by approximately gh/c². It's that simple. But it's a very tiny 
effect.

Planet gravity fields decrease quadratically over large distances (1/R²) but 
approximately linearly near the surface. So here on Earth, with g = ~9.8 m/s² 
and c = ~300,000 km/s, frequency increases by about 1e-18/cm, or 1e-16/m, or 
1e-13/km. This is called gravitational time dilation, or blueshift.

Now, for amateurs like us who just make things at home or buy and repair atomic 
clocks on eBay, numbers like 1e-18 and 1e-16 are completely out of range: 
that's what government labs are for. But the 1e-13 number is interesting, and 
approachable -- especially if you live near a tall mountain.

If you take a 1e-14 stable cesium clock up 1 km, it will run fast by about 
1e-13 (in frequency) and thus it will gain about 10 ± 1 ns per day (in time, or 
phase) compared to a clock left down at home. These days, time differences at 
the nanosecond level are easily measurable -- so that's what I did with 
http://leapsecond.com/great2005/

Of course, NIST & USNO always have much better clocks than we do, so they can 
measure the effect of smaller elevation changes, over smaller time scales. Just 
amazing. Maybe we'll be able to buy an optical clock on eBay 20 years from now.

Note that their clocks are not (yet) portable and consequently you can make a 
more accurate gravitational time dilation / general relativity measurement at 
home by taking vintage hp 5071A cesium beam microwave clocks up a tall mountain 
than they can with record-setting strontium optical clocks inside a NIST 
building.

Essentially, if you take a clock to high altitude for a weekend you create a 
super-duper blueshift "microscope". Instead of unimaginably small numbers like 
1e-18, I went up about 1340 meters (instead of just 1 cm) and I stayed up there 
about 42 hours (instead of one second). Thus my cm-second "magnification 
factor" was 1340 * 100 * 42 * 3600 = 20 billion! That reduces a crazy tiny 
number like 1e-18 to a real, tangible, measurable, fun-with-family, DIY time 
dilation number like 2e-8, or 20 ns.

/tvb

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