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XIII.—Studies in Clocks and Time-keeping: No. 4. The Present-day Performance of Clocks
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 September 2014
Extract
The actual performance that can be obtained from a clock under the most favourable circumstances is a matter of considerable scientific as well as technical interest, and this has been stimulated recently by the development of the Shortt clock. While there is no question that this clock can hold its rate in a way that no other type will do, there is evidence that exaggerated expectations are entertained with respect to its performance, even in well-informed quarters. This is my reason for publishing the following particulars, which are a digested account of the going of two of these clocks at the Royal Observatory, Edinburgh, during the year 1927.
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- Copyright © Royal Society of Edinburgh 1929
References
page 161 note * W. de Sitter, Supplement to Nature, 121, 106.
page 161 note † A similar study, though made with relatively imperfect appliances, of the going of two clocks, Shortt No. 3 and Shortt No. 11, at the Royal Observatory, Greenwich, was published in Monthly Notices R.A.S., 88 (1928), 465CrossRefGoogle Scholar ; cf. also Nature, 121 (1928), 868Google Scholar.
page 163 note * Cf. Monthly Notices R.A.S., 85 (1925), 560CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
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