Interesting, but the point is this. The reason why the frequency is precisely 9,192,631,770 times per second, rather than 5 billion, 10 billion, or some other arbitrary number, is that the second is already is defined in relation to the year. So if they chose one of those other numbers, 5 billion times per second, for example, there would not be the right number of seconds in a day, and in a year. So what this statement ("9,192,631,770 times per second") represents, is a relationship between the activity of those caesium atoms, and the motion of the earth in relation to the sun. If that relationship is not absolutely stable, then that number cannot be represented as a stable number. — Metaphysician Undercover
No it doesn't. The second is DEFINED with respect to a material property of Caesium. The new definition would have been chosen to be close to a previous definition which it superseded, for convenience, but needn't be the same. I presume you are familiar with leap seconds (and leap years)? — tom
Yes, the second is defined that way, I am fully aware of this. However, the year is defined by the earth's orbit. For fdrake's claim that the caesium clock will continue to be as accurate as it is now for 100 million years to be true, the relationship between the earth's orbit, and the caesium frequency, must remain the same for 100 million years. The use of leap seconds demonstrates that this is highly unlikely. — Metaphysician Undercover
Right, so the second is defined by a physical constant, but the year is defined by a varying quantity. — tom
Actually, that seems to be exactly what fdrake was claiming.The clock will not be as accurate as it is now in 100,000,000 years. No one is claiming that. — tom
That's an arbitrary assumption, that the second is constant, and the year is variant. — Metaphysician Undercover
Actually, that seems to be exactly what fdrake was claiming.
We know the Earth is Moving away from the Sun and that the year is getting longer. I's been measured. — tom
We can measure and calculate the energy of transition between hyperfine ground states of the caesium atom. — tom
For the energy of transition of caesium atoms to change - a change affecting all caesium atoms everywhere simultaneously I presume - what laws of physics do you propose to change? — tom
Well, we had an argument over whether metaphysical necessity of physical law was required for the measurement to be accurate at that point. — fdrake
Whether in 100 million years the clock has the same error rate depends on whether the physical laws would change. — fdrake
The quantification of the error in terms of 1 sec/100 mil years and its equivalence to the stated error rate in the paper is a separate issue. — fdrake
So we had this super-discussion of the necessity of physical law - neither of us believed that it was necessary. But yeah, if you want to talk about the scaling of the error rate without, in my view, muddying the waters with all this talk of the metaphysical necessity of physical law, I'd be interested in chatting about it again. — fdrake
Take tom's example, that it has now been proven that the earth is getting further from the sun, and the years is getting longer. That difference is so slight that people in the past would never have noticed it. They would do projections into the future, extrapolations as you do, without realizing that every year the length of the error grows by the tiniest amount. After a very long time, this tiniest amount multiplies into a larger amount. What if something similar is the case with the caesium frequency? This is just one example, of one possibility, but have you considered this possibility, that the error is cumulative?
Perhaps I misunderstand what you mean by metaphysical necessity of physical law, but I do believe that if you want to extrapolate the way that you do, you need some principles whereby you can argue that what was observed to be the case for one month will continue to be the case for 100 million years.
The possibility of error does not invalidate a measurement, the actuality of error does. — fdrake
So I quoted you some stuff about the chronology of the universe - the stelliferous era, the one which we are in now, is predicted to have the same atomic physics through its duration. — fdrake
Instead of focussing on what we can believe evidentially about the actuality of the laws of nature changing, you instead internalised the laws of nature to scientific consensus - claiming that the laws of nature change because of changes in science. In some trivial sense this is true; laws are descriptions of patterns in nature, if our descriptions change the linguistic formulation of patterns changes or new patterns are given descriptions. — fdrake
And in this, you provide the claim that the behaviour of oscillations between hyperfine states has been observed for one month, therefore measurement error analysis based on that month's observations cannot be used to calculate an error rate which is beyond the month. Maybe not beyond the month, you've been admittedly imprecise on exactly how 'the data was gathered in a month' actually changes the error analysis. Saying you have no idea of how 'it was gathered in a month' invalidates the quantification of error in the measurements. — fdrake
(1) You read the temperature from the thermometer at time t. Say that the duration of your observation was 1 second.
(2) There is a possible error associated with the thermometer and its error analysis which can multiply the error in an unbounded fashion.
(3) After 1 second, you do not know the temperature in the room since the error is possibly so large.
Try as you might, there isn't going to be any way you can establish the constancy of the laws of nature within a second through an a priori argument. All we have are perceptions of regularity and that stuff seems to work in the same way through terrestrial timescales in the real world. If this were something that could be reconciled a-priori Hume's arguments against it and Wittgensteinian-Kripkian analogues in philosophy of language and the whole problem with grue and blue wouldn't be there. It's always going to be possible that there's a huge unaccounted for error in the thermometer, therefore we don't know the temperature in the room on the thermometer's basis. — fdrake
I would like to think you would also believe that this argument form is invalid, since it leads to the complete absurdity that it's impossible to form opinions based on measurements. — fdrake
At this point, you said taking the reciprocal and saying the clock has amassed that error assumes the clock is working for that long. In a trivial sense it does - since if the clock didn't function for that long it would have a different amassed error but not a different error rate. Unless, for some reason, you undermine the measurement process of the clock by saying it requires the constancy of the laws of nature... — fdrake
Edit: when I say there's no good reason to believe atomic physics will change in 100 million years, I mean that there's no good reason to believe that operation of nature relevant to atomic physics will change, not that the scientific understanding of atoms won't change in that time period. It will, it will get more expansive and more precise. If we're still even alive as a species by that point, ho hum. — fdrake
By metaphysical necessity, I mean the metaphysical necessity of a proposition. By the metaphysical necessity of a proposition, I mean that it's something true which is not contingent. Something that must be the case of necessity, and cannot change. I'm sure you can see that 'the physical laws will not change' is implied by 'the physical laws cannot change' - and in the latter statement is the expression of what I mean by metaphysical necessity of physical law. I don't think it holds. I don't think it's necessary for the clock to function as it does, and I don't think it's required for reciprocating the error rate in terms of seconds/seconds to get how many seconds are required for amassing a single second of error. — fdrake
That is quite a startling claim given that the relationships between mass and energy, energy and wavelength, mass and velocity, length and velocity, time and velocity, ... ... (I could go on and on) were all discovered in Theory before any measurement or reason for measurement could be conceived. — tom
All we would need to do is measure g and use that to DEFINE L and T. But of course, no such physical system exists. — tom
But atomic transitions do exist, and the energy of transition can be measured. Because theory tells us the relationship between energy and frequency, and that transitions are induced in atoms when subjected to EM radiation of that frequency, we may DEFINE the second via that frequency. — tom
Empiricism!? — TheMadFool
The unit of g is m/s^2...time! has to be measured accurately first. — TheMadFool
Science is empirical. Measurement, time, length, mass, etc. comes first. — TheMadFool
Really? Empricism is the working principle of science. Why is it that scientists perform experiments if empiricism is a fallacy? — TheMadFool
I'm not saying g = m/s^2. The unit of g is m/s^2. — TheMadFool
Before we discover relationships (laws). — TheMadFool
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.