The physicists built their ytterbium clocks using about 10,000 rare-earth atoms cooled to 10 microkelvin (10 millionths of a degree above absolute zero) and trapped in an optical lattice made of laser light.
Another laser that "ticks" 518 trillion times per second triggers a transition between two energy levels in the atoms.
The clock's high stability is owed to the large number of atoms.
The new clocks can achieve precise results very quickly.
Technicians must average the current US civilian time standard, the NIST-F1 cesium fountain clock, for about 400,000 seconds (about five days) to obtain its best performance.
But the new ytterbium clocks can achieve that same result in about one second of averaging time.
The study was published in the journal Science.
- AAP