Ygrene Imref
Well-Known Member
SI defines a "second" as 9,192,631,770 cycles of the radiation produced by the transition between two levels of the cesium 133 atom.
Obviously that measure wasn't chosen for its ease and accessibility. As I understand it, cesium was chosen because of its stability, i.e. the repeatability of using that as a measure. If I'm wrong, please correct me.
I have two questions, then. First, if ease and accessibility was not a concern, but rather maximum repeatability of the measure, is cesium better for some reason than using the speed of light to define "second".
Because these are hyperfine transitions in the Cs-133 atom from ground, atomic clock make for better measurements of time than the speed of light. The idea behind it is that the speed of light travels different speed in different media (Cherenkov Effect, tachyons, bradyons, etc.) So, we would have to account for every single type of medium for which photons travel in order to determine the amount of time it takes a photon to travel 1 meter.
Radioactivity (consequence of Weak Force) is based on fundamental force, not action or transformation.
Next, do we know why cesium is so predictable and the decay of other radioactive elements is not as predictable?
We don't. There may be an explanation, but there really isn't a good explanation. Generally, Cs has valency that supports stability. The radiation emitted by Cs is more or less constant. Of the radioactive elements, Cs has been taken to be the best choice to measure emission spectra continuity/probability.
Time, by this or any other definition is, therefore, necessarily arbitrary.
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