Don't Panic Geocast

Episode 6 - "What if you calibrated your candles differently?"


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Time is a very complex subject that you can devote your entire life to. Today we’ll cover a few of the basics and enough to get your interest up! We’ll see that it’s difficult to know what a second is and how long relative times are, but absolute time is even messier! We also discuss dried coffee and tetris!

Importance of Time (and why it’s on a geology show)

  • It synchronizes the world and our human interactions (need minutes - hours accuracy generally)
  • It allows us to talk about events in a common coordinate system
  • Allows synchronization of scientific measurements and comparison of data sources. This is really important for seismometers for EQ location!
  • Let’s us use GPS! 1 billionth of a second (nano second) error in 1 GPS satellite, GPS receiver is +/- 1 ft to satellite, which is 2–3 feet on Earth.
  • Early Timekeeping

    • Burning candles in marked cases
    • Hourglass
    • Water powered clocks
    • Pendulum clocks Galileo and Huygens (fancy temperature compensation as well)
    • Video on Galileo
    • Modern Time Keeping (Atomic Clocks)

      • First clock was ammonia maser at National Bureau of Standards in 1949, but it really wasn’t all that accurate. It was more of a proof on concept device
      • First cesium clock was in 1955 at the National Physical Laboratory (UK)
      • Leads us to the definition of the SI second he duration of 9,192,631,770 cycles of radiation corresponding to the transition between two energy levels of the caesium–133 atom
      • The NIST-F2, a cesium atomic fountain clock, is good to one second in 300 million years. How F2 works is a combination of feedback control loops, lasers, and really cold atoms.
      • Remember, atomic clocks tick away seconds, they say nothing about the hours, minutes, seconds notation we use to write time. We just define a frequency
      • Leap seconds

        • Can’t predict them far into the future because of irregularities in Earth’s rotation
        • Announced ahead of time in a bulletin by the International Earth Rotation and Reference Systems Service
        • 25 leap seconds since 1972
        • Next leap second is this year! June 30, 2015
        • Real problem in computing, has caused software and GPS hardware crashes/issues before
        • Google smears the second out over a period prior to the leap
        • Time Standards

          There are TONS of time standards, we’re only going to touch on a few. Most are known with highest precision in retrospect!

          Solar time

          • Exactly what you would think, it’s about using the sun’s position as a time source. There is the sundial time (apparent solar time) that changes throughout the year, and the mean solar time which is like a clock time.
          • The equation of time represents the difference between the mean and apparent solar day
          • Star clock
          • International Atomic Time (TAI)

            • A measurement of proper time (it’s a relativity thing)
            • Weighted average of over 400 atomic clocks
            • If there is an error, it isn’t corrected. This makes it into terrestrial time.
            • Universal Time (UT)

              • This is what we used to call GMT!
              • Based on Earth’s rotation w.r.t different bodies (why there is UT0,UT1,UT1R,UT2,UTC)
              • UT1 is really mean solar time at the equator
              • Coordinated Universal Time (UTC)

                • Formalized in 1960
                • Adjustments were accommodated by leap seconds starting in 1972
                • Generally considered to be GMT, but GMT isn’t defined/recognized by the scientific community
                • This comes from TAI by accounting for leap seconds!
                • Epoch time (Unix Time)

                  • Epoch time is the number of seconds that have elapsed since 00:00:00 Coordinated Universal Time (UTC), Thursday, 1 January 1970
                  • No leap seconds by definition, but implementation is actually messy
                  • Stored is an integer (32-bits) meaning that it will run out and roll over on Tuesday 2038–01–19 One second after 03:14:07 UTC, it’s the year 2038 problem.
                  • The Timekeeper Video

                    Audio after the outro is David Allen

                    FunPaperFriday

                    • Coffee rings and coffee disks: Physics on the edge
                    • Particle shape controls movement during drying
                    • The can be applied to surface design, paints, and more
                    • Contact us:

                      Show - www.dontpanicgeocast.com - @dontpanicgeo - [email protected]

                      John Leeman - www.johnrleeman.com - @geo_leeman

                      Shannon Dulin - @ShannonDulin

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                      Don't Panic GeocastBy John Leeman and Shannon Dulin

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