And because hydrogen molecules consist of just a handful of particles, compared with
the larger caesium atoms used in atomic clocks, it would be easier to do theoretical calculations and compare them with real experiments, the team says.
Not exact matches
Transported by winds and deposited by heavy rainfall, the
caesium polluted
large swaths of the European continent.
Swept along by winds and settled by heavy rains, radioactive particles, especially
caesium - 137 (137Cs), polluted
large stretches of the European continent.