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How do the professional timekeepers of the word determine, to the precise nanosecond, when a new year begins? They simply consult an atomic clock. And at the end of last month, just in time to ring in the new year, the Hewlett-Packard company, of Palo Alto, California, unveiled the latest in these meticulous time-pieces. For nearly 30 years, the firm has been supplying military and scientific clients with atomic clocks; the most advanced models neither gain nor lose more than a second every 800,000 years. But the newest version, a $54,0000 device the size of a desktop computer, is accurate to one second in 1.6 million years—far longer than all of human history to date.
It is natural to wonder who could possibly need such precision. The answer: practically everyone, at least indirectly. Telephone and computer networks rely on atomic clocks to synchronize the flow of trillions of bits of information around the nation and the world, thus avoiding mammoth electronic logjams. Television and radio stations use the clocks to time their broadcasts. Satellite-based navigation systems depend on the devices to measure the arrival time of radio signals to within a tiny fraction of second, allowing users to gauge their location to within a few feet. The armed forces use atomic clocks to help track the almost imperceptible motions of continents across the surface of the earth and galaxies and stars across the sky. Even the people who dropped the ball in New York City’s Times Square to signal the start of 1992 relied on a timekeeping source that was pegged ultimately to an atomic clock.
The principle that lies behind all this precision comes out of quantum physics. When an atom is bombarded with electromagnetic radiation—in this case, microwaves—its electrons shift into a new energy state. Each type of atom responds most readily to a particular frequency of radiation. For the cesium 133 atoms in most atomic clocks, the frequency is 9,192,613,770 vibrations per second. That means that when a microwave beam inside the clock is set exactly to that frequency, the maximum number of atoms will undergo the energy shift. This signals the clock’s internal computer that the device is correctly tuned. And in fact, it is the vibrating microwaves that keep time; the atoms are used just to keep them on track.
Theoretically, an atomic clock could keep perfect time, but the actual performance depends on engineering details exactly how the microwaves hit the cesium atoms, how sophisticated the electronics are and so on. It was by improving factors like these that Hewett-Packard boosted its clocks’ performance from incredibly good to even better. The next generation of clocks should do better sill, but no one is sure when that generation will come along. For new, a second every million and a half years will have to do.
31. The newest atomic clock is accurate to ______.
32. Which of the following is NOT mentioned?
33. Atomic clock is very accurate because ______.
34. The next generation of clock will be made ______.

问题1选项
A.30 years
B.no more than a second every 800,000 years
C.a second in 1.6 million years
D.$54,000
问题2选项
A.Television and radio stations use atomic clocks to time their broadcasts.
B.The armed forces use atomic clocks to time secret calls to submarines around the world.
C.Scientists use atomic clocks to gauge the location of continents across the surface of the earth.
D.Telephone and computer networks rely on atomic clocks to synchronize the flow of large amount of information around the nation and the world.
问题3选项
A.quantum physics keeps perfect time
B.the cesium 133 atoms keeps perfect time
C.electro-magnetic radiation keeps time
D.the vibrating microwaves keep time
问题4选项
A.in a second
B.in a million years
C.in a half year
D.in the time no one is sure of
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