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- Path: sparky!uunet!dove!gilligan
- From: gilligan@bldrdoc.gov (Jonathan M. Gilligan)
- Newsgroups: alt.cesium
- Subject: Re: Time and our heroic element
- Message-ID: <5509@dove.nist.gov>
- Date: 11 Sep 92 20:40:51 GMT
- References: <18mi2eINN8e3@agate.berkeley.edu> <mDr-L=+@engin.umich.edu>
- Sender: news@dove.nist.gov
- Organization: National Institute of Standards and Technology
- Lines: 20
-
- In article <mDr-L=+@engin.umich.edu> positron@engin.umich.edu (Jonathan Scott Haas) writes:
- |>In article <18mi2eINN8e3@agate.berkeley.edu> gezelter@sam.cchem.berkeley.edu (Dan Gezelter) writes:
- |>>According to the National Institute of Standards and Technology
- |>>(formerly NBS):
- |>>
- |>> The second is defined as the duration of 9,192,631,770 periods of
- |>>the radiation corresponding to the transition between the two
- |>>hyperfine levels of the ground state of cesium 133.
- |>>
- |>
- |>You sure about this? I'm almost certain that a second is defined as the
- |>amount of time it takes light to travel 299,xxx,xxx meters in a vacuum.
-
- Wrong. The meter is defined as the distance light travels in
- 1/299,792,458 of a second in a vacuum in an inertial reference frame.
-
- ---Jon
- --
-
- Disclaimer --- The government probably disagrees with my opinions.
-