DocumentCode :
796659
Title :
Move over, quartz: the atomic clock gets smaller and cheaper
Author :
Geppert, L.
Volume :
42
Issue :
5
fYear :
2005
fDate :
5/1/2005 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage :
20
Lastpage :
21
Abstract :
While the standard quartz watch maybe less expensive, engineers still prefer to use atomic clocks because of the many advantages they offer. A good example is the new atomic clock that operates using a radio signal linked to the atomic standard. Its core is the size of a grain of rice, i.e. chip-scale, because it is made with standard microelectronic manufacturing techniques. The chip-scale clock uses some of the same principles as the standards institute´s primary clock, which is about the size of a compact automobile. In both, electromagnetic radiation causes cesium atoms in a vapor, which is enclosed in a cell, to oscillate at a stable frequency. In the primary clock, the radiation is a microwave field, while in the chip-scale clock it is pulses of infrared light from a laser, and everything but the vapor is solid state. The chip-scale clock is a work in progress but researchers have built a physics package, which contains the enclosure for the cesium atoms, the laser, the optics and the photodiodes.
Keywords :
atomic clocks; chip scale packaging; atomic clocks; atomic standard; cesium atoms; chip-scale clock; electromagnetic radiation; infrared light; laser; microwave field; physics package; primary clock; radio signals; standard microelectronic manufacturing techniques; standard quartz watch; Atom optics; Atomic beams; Atomic clocks; Atomic measurements; Automobile manufacture; Electromagnetic radiation; Laser theory; Masers; Microelectronics; Watches;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Spectrum, IEEE
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0018-9235
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/MSPEC.2005.1426964
Filename :
1426964
Link To Document :
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