In direct proportion to Einstein’s theory of relativity, time dilation was measured at the smallest scale ever.
In the article published in the journal Nature, scientists involved in the joint operation of the National Institute of Standards and Technology and the University of Colorado Boulder (JILA), Albert Einstein’s “pointing out that there is no absolute concept of time” He stated that they measured time dilation at the smallest scale ever, in direct proportion to the theory of relativity.
WATCHES SHOWING DIFFERENT TIMES WITH THE EFFECT OF GRAVITY
JILA scientists are only one millimeter apart “about the width of a pen tip” He found that the high-precision clocks found in the world showed slightly different times due to the effect of gravity.
MILIMETRIC MEASUREMENTS SUCCESSFUL FOR THE FIRST TIME
In the article, high precision atomic clocks have been used for a long time. “in measurements in areas from 30 centimeters to thousands of kilometers as fundamental probes of space and time” It was emphasized that a millimetric measurement was achieved for the first time.
50 TIMES MORE PRECISE WATCHES PERIOD
As the results of the new experiment pave the way for a time when clocks that are 50 times more sensitive than existing ones will be used, quantum mechanics and long-explored “general relativistic union” It was stated that it would help to reveal the basic principles of the universe on such matters.
WHAT DO ATOMIC CLOCKS DO?
Thanks to atomic clocks that can measure time with increasingly more precision, processes such as volcanic eruptions, tidal movements at sea level, global warming scales and the timing of deep space missions will be calculated with much higher accuracy.
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