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Introduction to special issueHigher StandardsIan Osborne and Daniel Clery
Arguably, today's most important commodity is time. Atomic clocks keep time with an accuracy of about 1 part in 1015 and already have shown applications in everyday life, from navigation to satellite and high-speed optical communications. With a view to improving on this, Diddams et al. (p. 1318) review the progress made with time and frequency standards in the optical regime, where the higher operating frequency offers the possibility of a finer time scale. [See also the Report by Margolis et al. (p. 1355), who show that the transition frequency of a strontium ion can now be determined to within 1 hertz, and the Research Article by Marian (published on Science Express) on using optical frequency combs for precision spectroscopy.] Exploiting the recognition that the ideal way to count quantities would be in fundamental discrete units, or quanta, was severely hampered by the lack of technology. Standards of the fundamental units were all based on experimental artifacts. With improved technology, combined with improved materials and ingenious engineering, Flowers (p. 1324) reviews the recent progress toward quantum-based standards. Quantum mechanics is one of the most sophisticated tools available. Giovannetti et al. (p. 1330) review theoretical and experimental work on beating the so-called quantum limit. By playing tricks with quantum mechanics, such as using quantum squeezing, they show how measurement can be improved on.
The News pages present a spectrum of the cutting edge of metrology. Andrew Watson describes efforts to turn measurement standards into a counting game: counting atoms to define a kilogram, electrons to define current and capacitance, phonons for temperature, and photons for luminosity (p. 1308). Watson also describes the difficulties facing the semiconductor industry in measuring and reproducing features on chips now that they are down to a few nanometers in size (p. 1309). Atomic clocks are already incredibly accurate, but Robert F. Service found a group that is pushing the decimal point further back with some help from quantum entanglement (p. 1310). The European satellite Hipparcos is the premier metrologist of the heavens, plotting the positions of stars to unprecedented accuracy. Its plot of the position of the Pleiades, however, proved to be a headache, as Govert Schilling found out (p. 1312). In an effort to get a glimpse of lightning-fast processes inside the atom, researchers are striving to create shorter and shorter laser pulses to provide a flash gun. The fastest pulses are now measured in attoseconds: a billionth of a billionth of a second. But, asks Alexander Hellemans (p. 1313), how do you measure a pulse that short?
The editors suggest the following Related Resources on Science sites:In Science Magazine
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Science. ISSN 0036-8075 (print), 1095-9203 (online)