FOR THE discerning timekeeper, only an atomic clock will do. Whereas the best quartz timepieces will lose a millisecond every ...
Nuclear clocks could be more accurate than atomic clocks by a factor of about 10, potentially leading to improved GPS ...
The most precise clocks in the world will lose only one second every 300 billion years—and someday they might fit in your ...
Chinese officials say that the weapon can be used to suppress the signals of American GPS and other satellites.
Chinese scientists have advanced in developing a high-power microwave weapon system that uses multiple transmitting vehicles ...
When tackling this, it’s important to note that the specifications governing quantum photonic components (QPCs) are so tough to fulfil that unviable processes will prevent component prices from ...
potentially improving the precision of atomic clocks and magnetometers used in navigation, telecommunication, and aviation.
The new high-powered microwave weapon combines many small electromagnetic waves to ... the smaller lasers that exceed the accuracy of atomic clocks, according to the Independent.
A goofy-seeming sci-fi subgenre holds useful lessons about managing technology in an accelerating age.
In turn, atomic clocks on GNSS satellites became the most convenient way ... for an edge data center or a small facility, all the way to 24 hours for a large cluster of servers or, in some extreme ...