Caesium standard
The caesium standard is a primary frequency standard in which the photon absorption by transitions between the two hyperfine ground states of caesium-133 atoms is used to control the output frequency. The first caesium clock was built by Louis Essen in 1955 at the National Physical Laboratory in the UK and promoted worldwide by Gernot M. R. Winkler of the United States Naval Observatory.
Caesium atomic clocks are one of the most accurate time and frequency standards, and serve as the primary standard for the definition of the second in the International System of Units, the modern metric system. By definition, radiation produced by the transition between the two hyperfine ground states of caesium-133 has a frequency,, of exactly. That value was chosen so that the caesium second equaled, to the limit of measuring ability in 1960 when it was adopted, the existing standard ephemeris second based on the Earth's orbit around the Sun. Because no other measurement involving time had been as precise, the effect of the change was less than the experimental uncertainty of all existing measurements.
While the second is the only base unit to be explicitly defined in terms of the caesium standard, the majority of SI units have definitions that mention either the second, or other units defined using the second. Consequently, every base unit except the mole and every named derived unit except the coulomb, gray, sievert, radian, and steradian have values that are implicitly at least partially defined by the properties of the caesium-133 hyperfine transition radiation. And of these, all but the mole, the coulomb, and the dimensionless radian and steradian are implicitly defined by the general properties of electromagnetic radiation.
Technical details
The official definition of the second was first given by the BIPM at the 13th General Conference on Weights and Measures in 1967 as: "The second is the duration of periods of the radiation corresponding to the transition between the two hyperfine levels of the ground state of the caesium 133 atom." At its 1997 meeting the BIPM added to the previous definition the following specification: "This definition refers to a caesium atom at rest at a temperature of 0 K."The BIPM restated this definition in its 26th conference, "The second is defined by taking the fixed numerical value of the caesium frequency ∆νCs, the unperturbed ground-state hyperfine transition frequency of the caesium 133 atom, to be 9 192 631 770 when expressed in the unit Hz, which is equal to s−1."
The meaning of the preceding definition is as follows. The caesium atom has a ground state electron state with configuration 6s1 and, consequently, atomic term symbol 2S1/2. This means that there is one unpaired electron and the total electron spin of the atom is 1/2. Moreover, the nucleus of caesium-133 has a nuclear spin equal to 7/2. The simultaneous presence of electron spin and nuclear spin leads, by a mechanism called hyperfine interaction, to a splitting of all energy levels into two sub-levels. One of the sub-levels corresponds to the electron and nuclear spin being parallel, leading to a total spin F equal to ; the other sub-level corresponds to anti-parallel electron and nuclear spin, leading to a total spin. In the caesium atom it so happens that the sub-level lowest in energy is the one with, while the sub-level lies energetically slightly above. When the atom is irradiated with electromagnetic radiation having an energy corresponding to the energetic difference between the two sub-levels the radiation is absorbed and the atom is excited, going from the sub-level to the one. After some time the atom will re-emit the radiation and return to its ground state. From the definition of the second it follows that the radiation in question has a frequency of exactly, corresponding to a wavelength of about 3.26 cm and therefore belonging to the microwave range.
Note that a common confusion involves the conversion from angular frequency to frequency, or vice versa. Angular frequencies are conventionally given as s−1 in scientific literature, but here the units implicitly mean radians per second. In contrast, the unit Hz should be interpreted as cycles per second. The conversion formula is, which implies that 1 Hz corresponds to an angular frequency of approximately 6.28 radians per second.
Parameters and significance in the second and other SI units
Suppose the caesium standard has the parameters:- Velocity: c
- Energy/frequency: h
- Time period:
- Frequency:
- Wavelength:
- Photon energy:
- Photon mass equivalent:
Time and frequency
- 1 second, s, = 9,192,631,770
- 1 hertz, Hz, = 1/s =
- 1 becquerel, Bq, = 1 nuclear decay/s = nuclear decays/
Length
In 1983, the meter was, indirectly, defined in terms of the caesium standard with the formal definition "The metre is the length of the path travelled by light in vacuum during a time interval of 1/299 792 458 of a second." This implied:Between 1960 and 1983, the metre had been defined by the wavelength of a different transition frequency associated with the krypton-86 atom. This had a much higher frequency and shorter wavelength than the caesium standard, falling inside the visible spectrum. The first definition, used between 1889 and 1960, was by the international prototype meter.
Mass, energy, and force
Following the 2019 revision of the SI, electromagnetic radiation, in general, was explicitly defined to have the exact parameters:- c = 299,792,458 m/s
- h = J s
- = 9,192,631,770 Hz
- = =
- = c = m
- = h = 9,192,631,770 Hz × =
- = = = kg
- 1 kilogram, kg, =
- 1 joule, J, =
- 1 watt, W, = 1 J/s =
- 1 newton, N, = 1 J/m = /
- 1 pascal, Pa, = 1 N/m2 = /3
- 1 gray, Gy, = 1 J/kg = / =
- 1 sievert, Sv, = the ionizing radiation dose equivalent to 1 gray of gamma rays
Temperature
From 1954 to 2019, the SI temperature scales were defined using the triple point of water and absolute zero. The 2019 revision replaced these with an assigned value for the Boltzmann constant, k, of, implying:- 1 kelvin, K, = J/2 per degree of freedom = per degree of freedom = per degree of freedom
- Temperature in degrees Celsius, °C, = temperature in kelvins − 273.15 =
Amount of substance
- 1 mole, mol, = elementary entities
- 1 katal, kat, = 1 mol/s = elementary entities/
Electromagnetic units
- 1 coulomb, C, = e
- 1 ampere, or amp, A, = 1 C/s = e
- 1 volt, V, = 1 J/C = /e
- 1 farad, F, = 1 C/V = e2/
- 1 ohm, Ω, = 1 V/A = / e2 = h/''e2
- 1 siemens, S, = 1/Ω = e''2/h
- 1 weber, Wb, = 1 V s = /e = h/''e
- 1 tesla, T, = 1 Wb/m2 = /e'' 2 = E/''e c
- 1 henry, H, = Ω s = h'' /e2
Optical units
- Frequency: 540 THz
- Time period: fs
- Wavelength: μm
- Photon energy: Hz × J s = J
- luminous efficacy, KCD, = 683 lm/W
- luminous energy per photon,, = J × 683 lm/W = lm s
The parameters of the caesium-133 hyperfine transition radiation expressed exactly in SI units are:
- Frequency = 9,192,631,770 Hz
- Time period = s
- Wavelength = m
- Photon energy = J
- Photon mass equivalent = kg
- 1 second =
- 1 metre = c/
- 1 kilogram = h /c2
- 1 ampere = e
- 1 kelvin = h /k
- 1 mole = elementary entities
- 1 candela = h 2 KCD/sr