Would you be happy with 6*10^-16 seconds per 2 seconds? How about 9*10^-16 per 3? You can scale the error like that all you like, it still represents the same error rate — fdrake
It seems to me that what you are implying is that expressing the extraordinary accuracy of the atomic in terms of time scales that a non-technical audience might better understand, is not the same as claiming the clock will still exist in 100,000,000 years?
It isn't an extrapolation, it's a rounding of the error rate translated to a timescale that denotes the sheer precision of the measurement to a lay auidience. See tom's post. — fdrake
An extrapolation is an extension of an analysis outside the data range for which it was estimated. — fdrake
Edit 2: making this explicit, if the clock stopped working entirely, of course it wouldn't provide a precise measurement of the second. If it stopped working in a more subtle way, say a variation in the laws of physics relevant to the functioning of the clock, then it may stop working entirely or degrade in performance. Otherwise, so long as it functions in accordance with the set up in the paper, it will have that error rate.
However, that they can change doesn't entail they will change in a way that destroys the accuracy of the clock. So, tell me when they will change, and how they will change so that the accuracy of the clock is destroyed. — fdrake
Nor is it an extrapolation to translate the error rate to a different numerical scale. — fdrake
It isn't an extrapolation to say if nature keeps working as it does then the clock will. — fdrake
A baby is born at 10pm in New York. Someone looks at their watch. Since the measurement process took a second, we can't justifiably say the baby's been born at 10pm. When you look away from a thermometer after checking the temperature, you can't justifiably say what temperature it is. You can't justifiably say the dinosaurs were around millions of years ago. You can't date trees based off their rings. All of geological history may as well be a myth, all of evolutionary theory has to be thrown away, every single measurement or calculation ever that was done must be discarded because it can't be justified since it's an extrapolation. Measurement error analysis is impossible, every psychological experiment ever done is bunk, every piece of anecdotal evidence is in even worse standing. The fabric of our social life disappears - we can no longer learn and generalise based on our experiences. — fdrake
This evidence supports my claim that not only is the extrapolation possibly wrong, it is probably wrong. I do not claim to know anything about what the error actually is.
You need to watch this. — tom
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