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Elements: Caesium

The atomic clock runs on caesium, and has redefined the very meaning of time. But it has also introduced a bug into timekeeping.

The atomic clock runs on caesium, and has redefined the very meaning of time. But it has also introduced a bug into timekeeping that affects everything from computerised financial markets to electricity grids, to satellite navigation, to the Greenwich Meridian. Justin Rowlatt travels to the birthplace of modern time, the National Physical Laboratory in Teddington, England, to speak to Krzysztof Szymaniec, the keeper of the 'Caesium Fountain', and Leon Lobo, the man charged with disseminating time to the UK.

He also hears from Felicitas Arias, director of Time at the Bureau International des Poids et Mesures in Paris, about plans to abolish the 鈥渓eap second鈥. And the Astronomer Royal, Martin Rees, explains why even the atomic clock can never hope to provide an absolute measure of time.

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18 minutes

Last on

Wed 24 Sep 2014 14:32GMT

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  • Wed 24 Sep 2014 07:32GMT
  • Wed 24 Sep 2014 14:32GMT

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