Atomic Clock [FAST]
Stock exchanges use atomic time to log trades down to the microsecond, preventing fraud and ensuring a fair "first-come, first-served" system.
Since 1967, the International System of Units (SI) has defined one second as exactly 9,192,631,770 oscillations of the radiation produced by this transition in a cesium-133 atom. Why It Matters Atomic Clock
GPS satellites carry atomic clocks. Because radio signals travel at the speed of light, even a billionth of a second of error could result in your GPS being off by several miles. Stock exchanges use atomic time to log trades
The best modern atomic clocks are so stable that they wouldn't lose or gain a single second in —a span of time longer than the age of the universe. Because radio signals travel at the speed of
You likely interact with atomic clocks every day without realizing it:
Scientists use these clocks to detect tiny changes in gravity (General Relativity) and to search for dark matter. Precision Limits