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1 Einstein, Time, and Cool Stuff William D. Phillips

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Page 1: 1 Einstein, Time, and Cool Stuff World Science Festival 13 June 2009 Kimmel Center, NYU William D. Phillips

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Einstein, Time, and Cool Stuff

William D. Phillips

Page 2: 1 Einstein, Time, and Cool Stuff World Science Festival 13 June 2009 Kimmel Center, NYU William D. Phillips

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What does NIST do?

length

time

mass

Images Copyright Shutterstock

Among other responsibilities, the National Institute of Standards and Technology is

the keeper of the the standards of measurements for the United States.

Page 3: 1 Einstein, Time, and Cool Stuff World Science Festival 13 June 2009 Kimmel Center, NYU William D. Phillips

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Time and Einstein

What is time?

Images Copyright Shutterstock

Time is what a clock measures.

Page 4: 1 Einstein, Time, and Cool Stuff World Science Festival 13 June 2009 Kimmel Center, NYU William D. Phillips

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Clocks “tick”…

… and different clocks have different “tickers.”

Page 5: 1 Einstein, Time, and Cool Stuff World Science Festival 13 June 2009 Kimmel Center, NYU William D. Phillips

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The best tickers are atoms.

Every quartz watch crystal vibrates at a rate

different from every other one.

Every 133Cs atom is absolutely identical to every other one.

Page 6: 1 Einstein, Time, and Cool Stuff World Science Festival 13 June 2009 Kimmel Center, NYU William D. Phillips

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Spring forward

Cesium atom clocks like the one in this cartoon are accurate to one second in 3

million years.

Copyright Nick Downs

Page 7: 1 Einstein, Time, and Cool Stuff World Science Festival 13 June 2009 Kimmel Center, NYU William D. Phillips

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Spring forward

Cesium atom clocks like the one in this cartoon are accurate to one second in 3

million years.

Copyright Nick Downs

Page 8: 1 Einstein, Time, and Cool Stuff World Science Festival 13 June 2009 Kimmel Center, NYU William D. Phillips

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Spring forward

Cesium atom clocks like the one in this cartoon are accurate to one second in 3

million years.

Copyright Nick Downs

Who needs a clock this

good?

Page 9: 1 Einstein, Time, and Cool Stuff World Science Festival 13 June 2009 Kimmel Center, NYU William D. Phillips

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My goodness, it’s 12:15:0936420175. Time for lunch

Page 10: 1 Einstein, Time, and Cool Stuff World Science Festival 13 June 2009 Kimmel Center, NYU William D. Phillips

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Who cares?

One reason we need atomic clocks is the Global Positioning System.

Atomic clocks in satellites guide cars, planes, backpackers, even golfers.

Image Copyright ShutterstockImage NASA

Page 11: 1 Einstein, Time, and Cool Stuff World Science Festival 13 June 2009 Kimmel Center, NYU William D. Phillips

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How GPS WorksAll the satellite clocks are synchronized.

They broadcast their time and their location.

Page 12: 1 Einstein, Time, and Cool Stuff World Science Festival 13 June 2009 Kimmel Center, NYU William D. Phillips

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By the time the time signal reaches you, your clock has advanced a little, so you know how far away that satellite is.

How GPS Works 2

Page 13: 1 Einstein, Time, and Cool Stuff World Science Festival 13 June 2009 Kimmel Center, NYU William D. Phillips

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Each satellite, at a different distance, shows a different delay.

How GPS Works 3

Page 14: 1 Einstein, Time, and Cool Stuff World Science Festival 13 June 2009 Kimmel Center, NYU William D. Phillips

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Knowing how far you are from two satellites tells you where you are (if you, and the satellites were on a flat

sheet.

How GPS Works 4

Page 15: 1 Einstein, Time, and Cool Stuff World Science Festival 13 June 2009 Kimmel Center, NYU William D. Phillips

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In a 3-dimensional world, you need three satellites in view (four if you

don’t have your own clock) to tell where you

are.

How GPS Works 5

Page 16: 1 Einstein, Time, and Cool Stuff World Science Festival 13 June 2009 Kimmel Center, NYU William D. Phillips

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# 1: Atoms Animations

Page 17: 1 Einstein, Time, and Cool Stuff World Science Festival 13 June 2009 Kimmel Center, NYU William D. Phillips

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#2: Hot & Cold Animation

Page 18: 1 Einstein, Time, and Cool Stuff World Science Festival 13 June 2009 Kimmel Center, NYU William D. Phillips

18Demonstrations

Page 19: 1 Einstein, Time, and Cool Stuff World Science Festival 13 June 2009 Kimmel Center, NYU William D. Phillips

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The Absolute or “Kelvin” temperature scale

0 K => absolute zero

300 K => room temperature

Page 20: 1 Einstein, Time, and Cool Stuff World Science Festival 13 June 2009 Kimmel Center, NYU William D. Phillips

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The Absolute or “Kelvin” temperature scale

300 K => room temperature273 K => ice melts

0 K => absolute zero

Page 21: 1 Einstein, Time, and Cool Stuff World Science Festival 13 June 2009 Kimmel Center, NYU William D. Phillips

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The Absolute or “Kelvin” temperature scale

0 K => absolute zero

300 K => room temperature

195 K => dry ice

273 K => ice melts

Page 22: 1 Einstein, Time, and Cool Stuff World Science Festival 13 June 2009 Kimmel Center, NYU William D. Phillips

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The Absolute or “Kelvin” temperature scale

0 K => absolute zero

300 K => room temperature

195 K => dry ice

273 K => ice melts

185 K => a cold day in Antarctica

Page 23: 1 Einstein, Time, and Cool Stuff World Science Festival 13 June 2009 Kimmel Center, NYU William D. Phillips

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The Absolute or “Kelvin” temperature scale

0 K => absolute zero

300 K => room temperature

195 K => dry ice

77 K => liquid nitrogen

273 K => ice melts

185 K => a cold day in Antarctica

Page 24: 1 Einstein, Time, and Cool Stuff World Science Festival 13 June 2009 Kimmel Center, NYU William D. Phillips

24pull out balloons

Page 25: 1 Einstein, Time, and Cool Stuff World Science Festival 13 June 2009 Kimmel Center, NYU William D. Phillips

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#3: balloon animation

Hot gas—atoms are free and isolated, but

fast.

Condensed “gas”—atoms are frozen, stuck to each other and the container.

Page 26: 1 Einstein, Time, and Cool Stuff World Science Festival 13 June 2009 Kimmel Center, NYU William D. Phillips

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Comet photo courtesy NASA

Page 27: 1 Einstein, Time, and Cool Stuff World Science Festival 13 June 2009 Kimmel Center, NYU William D. Phillips

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#4: Comet animation

Page 28: 1 Einstein, Time, and Cool Stuff World Science Festival 13 June 2009 Kimmel Center, NYU William D. Phillips

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Na Optical Molasses

How cold are these atoms?

Page 29: 1 Einstein, Time, and Cool Stuff World Science Festival 13 June 2009 Kimmel Center, NYU William D. Phillips

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The Absolute or “Kelvin” temperature scale

0 K => Absolute Zero

300 K => room temperature

195 K => dry ice

77 K => liquid nitrogen

273 K => ice melts

185 K => a cold day in Antarctica

Page 30: 1 Einstein, Time, and Cool Stuff World Science Festival 13 June 2009 Kimmel Center, NYU William D. Phillips

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The Absolute or “Kelvin” temperature scale

0 K => Absolute Zero

300 K => room temperature

195 K => dry ice

77 K => liquid nitrogen

3 K => outer space

273 K => ice melts

185 K => a cold day in Antarctica

Page 31: 1 Einstein, Time, and Cool Stuff World Science Festival 13 June 2009 Kimmel Center, NYU William D. Phillips

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T = 700 nK (Vthermal < 1 cm/s)

100 million times colder than liquid nitrogen

4 million times colder than outer space.

We have gotten cesium atoms as cold as:

Atoms this cold make great clocks.

This was 200 time COLDER than everybody thought was

possible!

Page 32: 1 Einstein, Time, and Cool Stuff World Science Festival 13 June 2009 Kimmel Center, NYU William D. Phillips

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Page 33: 1 Einstein, Time, and Cool Stuff World Science Festival 13 June 2009 Kimmel Center, NYU William D. Phillips

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This clock is accurate to one second in 80 million years…

Page 34: 1 Einstein, Time, and Cool Stuff World Science Festival 13 June 2009 Kimmel Center, NYU William D. Phillips

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Clocks with laser cooled ions (electrically charged atoms) are good to 1 second in a

billion years…

Page 35: 1 Einstein, Time, and Cool Stuff World Science Festival 13 June 2009 Kimmel Center, NYU William D. Phillips

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Clocks with laser cooled ions (electrically charged atoms) are good to 1 second in a

billion years…

… close enough for government work.

Page 36: 1 Einstein, Time, and Cool Stuff World Science Festival 13 June 2009 Kimmel Center, NYU William D. Phillips

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But where do you keep the coldest gas in the universe?

No ordinary container will do.

Page 37: 1 Einstein, Time, and Cool Stuff World Science Festival 13 June 2009 Kimmel Center, NYU William D. Phillips

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But where do you keep the coldest gas in the universe?

No ordinary container will do.

We use a magnetic bottle.

Use a magnetic bottle

Page 38: 1 Einstein, Time, and Cool Stuff World Science Festival 13 June 2009 Kimmel Center, NYU William D. Phillips

38Trapping-levitation

Page 39: 1 Einstein, Time, and Cool Stuff World Science Festival 13 June 2009 Kimmel Center, NYU William D. Phillips

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Page 40: 1 Einstein, Time, and Cool Stuff World Science Festival 13 June 2009 Kimmel Center, NYU William D. Phillips

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laser cooled clock performance

Using a magnetic bottle as a container for ultra-cold atoms…

Page 41: 1 Einstein, Time, and Cool Stuff World Science Festival 13 June 2009 Kimmel Center, NYU William D. Phillips

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laser cooled clock performance

…and evaporating atoms from the magnetic container, gets to even colder temperatures—less than one billionth of a degree.

Einstein drawing by Bülent Atalay

Using a magnetic bottle as a container for ultra-cold atoms…

Page 42: 1 Einstein, Time, and Cool Stuff World Science Festival 13 June 2009 Kimmel Center, NYU William D. Phillips

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10 000 K

100 K

1 K

10-2 K

10-4 K

10-6 K

10-8 K

10-10 K

10-12 K

surface of the sun: 5000 Kroom temperature: 300 K

outer space: 3 K

liquid nitrogen: 77 K

laser cooling: 0.7 K

Bose-Einstein Condensation: 1 nK

BEC in space (the future):1 pK

logarithmicthermometer

Page 43: 1 Einstein, Time, and Cool Stuff World Science Festival 13 June 2009 Kimmel Center, NYU William D. Phillips

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What’s Next?• Better clocks

• Better tests of Einstein’s theories of time and gravity

• Ultra-cold collisions

• New kinds of materials

• Better understanding of superconductivity

• Quantum computers

• More . . .

Page 44: 1 Einstein, Time, and Cool Stuff World Science Festival 13 June 2009 Kimmel Center, NYU William D. Phillips

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Laser cooling group

Page 45: 1 Einstein, Time, and Cool Stuff World Science Festival 13 June 2009 Kimmel Center, NYU William D. Phillips

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The End

Page 46: 1 Einstein, Time, and Cool Stuff World Science Festival 13 June 2009 Kimmel Center, NYU William D. Phillips

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Atoms in a gas are moving really fast,

and that makes it hard to measure their ticking.

Fast gas atoms make a

fast atomic beam.

about 200 meters/sec

Page 47: 1 Einstein, Time, and Cool Stuff World Science Festival 13 June 2009 Kimmel Center, NYU William D. Phillips

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COLD:

slow atoms

HOT:

fast atoms

Hot and Cold

Page 48: 1 Einstein, Time, and Cool Stuff World Science Festival 13 June 2009 Kimmel Center, NYU William D. Phillips

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How do we cool something without touching it?

Page 49: 1 Einstein, Time, and Cool Stuff World Science Festival 13 June 2009 Kimmel Center, NYU William D. Phillips

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Comet photo courtesy NASA

Page 50: 1 Einstein, Time, and Cool Stuff World Science Festival 13 June 2009 Kimmel Center, NYU William D. Phillips

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We use the pressure of light to push on atoms and slow them down.

Comet photo courtesy NASA