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In 1955, Dr Louis Essen and J.V.L Parry developed a long beam apparatus. It used the cesium-133 atom to create a working
clock. This was the first accurate cesium atomic and it was developed in the UK’s National Physical Laboratory. Essen
and his team teamed up with the U.S Naval Observatory. Together they were able to measure the frequency of the cesium
transition in relation to time measured against the movements of planets. These works lead them to determine that a
second is defined as 9,192,631,770 periods of the cesium-133 atom.
Whilst this work was going on, Jack Zacharias from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology worked on a product
called ‘Atomichron’, which was completed in 1956. ‘Atomichron’ is considered to be the world’s first commercial
atomic clock. By 1960, 50 of these clocks had been sold for approximately $20,000 each.
The influence of atomic time really made its mark in 1967. At the 13th General Conference on Weights and Measures, a
second was redefined based on the vibrations of the cesium atom. For the first time, the world’s timekeeping system
did not have an astrological basis.
Further recognition was awarded in 1989 when the Nobel Prize in Physics was awarded to three researchers – Norman Ramsey,
Wolfgang Paul and Hans Dehmelt for their work on the development of the atomic clock.
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