What is Cesium-133?

Cesium-133 is a special kind of atom that helps scientists keep time super accurately.

Imagine you have a clock that ticks like a tiny drum, each tick is perfectly timed, and it never gets tired or confused. That’s what Cesium-133 does, but inside the world of really small things. When scientists want to define what a second is, they look at how often this special atom vibrates.

How It Works

Cesium-133 has atoms that behave like little dancers, when you give them just the right kind of energy (like a gentle push), they start wiggling in a very precise pattern. Scientists count these wiggles, and each one is like a tick on a super accurate clock.

In fact, one second is officially defined by how many times this atom vibrates in a certain way, about 9,192,631,770 vibrations! That’s more than nine billion ticks every second. It's like having the most precise metronome ever made.

Because of this, Cesium-133 is used in atomic clocks, which are so accurate that they lose only about one second every 150 years, that's like being on time for a party even if you've been dancing since the dinosaurs!

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Examples

  1. Cesium-133 is a type of atom used to make super accurate clocks.
  2. It helps scientists measure time with incredible precision.
  3. These clocks are so precise they lose only one second every 100 years.

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