A leading theory suggests that "jiffy" was originally slang for a __. | |
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| Numbers Don't Lie |
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| Minimum number of years the world's oldest clock, at Salisbury Cathedral, has kept time | 637 |
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| | Year Jiffy Lube was founded, in Utah | 1971 |
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| Number of "atoms" — an Old English measurement — in a minute | 376 |
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| | Approximate year that the word "jiffy" entered the English lexicon | 1785 |
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| Technically, a second is not 1/60 of a minute. |
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It's forgivable to think a second is one-sixtieth of a minute (or 1/86,400 of a day). After all, it's pretty prominently displayed on every clock and watch ever built. But time isn't nearly as neat as our timekeeping devices make it out to be. The universe is full of astronomical quirks, and for scientific purposes a second needs to be much more precise than a simple fraction. That's why, in 1967, scientists changed the official definition of a second from 1/86,400 of a day to "the duration of 9,192,631,770 periods of the radiation corresponding to the transition between the two hyperfine levels of the ground state of the caesium-133 atom." This is the basic principle behind atomic clocks, super-accurate instruments that use atomic physics to maintain long-lasting accuracy. For some state-of-the-art devices, it would take 15 billion years for the clock to be off by one second. | |
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