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Thursday, September 25, 2008

World Atomic Clocks Should Be Capable Of Receiving Signals From Different Parts Of The World

Wouldn’t it be wonderful if one could travel to different parts of the world and still have a clock around that will give you the exact time down to the nearest split-second? With the advent of the world atomic clock, such a facility has now become available to everyone and even if you travel to halfway across the world, a world atomic clock will always be able to give you the exact time of day in that part of the world.

Exceptional Functionality

The hallmark of a good quality world atomic clock is its exceptional functionality and sleek and compact design which should make it capable of receiving signals that are transmitted by different governments in diverse regions of the world. It can then use this information to tell the time in a particular part of the world right down to the last split-second.

In fact, a world atomic clock can also automatically set the date and it is even able to adjust its times to account for daylight saving time. But, scientists from different parts of the world are now looking beyond world atomic clocks and are in fact thinking about more advanced concepts that will mean that the clocks in our world will, in the future, need to have their time set by a timepiece that will circle high above the Earth. According to the National Institute of Standards and Technology, this may one day become the norm rather than an exception – if things go according to plan.

In the minds of scientists working for NASA, there may in fact, be a better way to keep world time than through use of a world atomic clock and that is why they are working on a mission funded by NASA and which is known as Primary Atomic Reference Clock in Space or PARCS that has been put into the ISS (International Space Station) in the year 2006 in the hope that it will someday help NASA achieve its objectives to provide even more accurate time.

Because atoms can be slowed down considerably in space, future world atomic clocks could be made to provide ten times the accuracy as compared to what present day world atomic clocks are capable of.

In the meantime, the average American will have to contend with either using a digital clock. or using a world atomic clock. However, it is the former type of clock that is very popular today, and even wrist watches are going digital and since such watches and clocks are quite accurate and also not that expensive, many more people prefer using them instead of conventional watches and clocks.

One of the features of a world atomic clock is that it has a tiny elf within that does nothing but continuously ring the Time service in each country that you travel to and in this simple way, it can display the current time for the country that you have landed in.

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