After having merried Rosalyn Shulemson in 1943, Markowitz eventually became director of the department. He developed the ephemeris time, which had been proposed by Simon Newcomb in the 19th century, as an international time standard. He subsequently worked with Louis Essen in England to calibrate the newly developed atomic clocks in terms of the ephemeris second. The fundamental frequency of caesium atomic clocks, which they determined as 9,192,631,770 Hz, was used to define the second internationally since 1967. At the International Astronomical Union (IAU) meeting in Dublin in 1955 he had proposed the system which remains today.