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Synchronization of clocks through 12km of strongly turbulent air over a city.

Authors :
Sinclair, Laura C.
Swann, William C.
Bergeron, Hugo
Baumann, Esther
Cermak, Michael
Coddington, Ian
DeschĂȘnes, Jean-Daniel
Giorgetta, Fabrizio R.
Juarez, Juan C.
Khader, Isaac
Petrillo, Keith G.
Souza, Katherine T.
Dennis, Michael L.
Newbury, Nathan R.
Source :
Applied Physics Letters; 10/10/2016, Vol. 109 Issue 15, p151104-1-151104-4, 4p, 1 Diagram, 1 Chart, 3 Graphs
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

We demonstrate real-time, femtosecond-level clock synchronization across a low-lying, strongly turbulent, 12-km horizontal air path by optical two-way time transfer. For this long horizontal freespace path, the integrated turbulence extends well into the strong turbulence regime corresponding to multiple scattering with a Rytov variance up to 7 and with the number of signal interruptions exceeding 100 per second. Nevertheless, optical two-way time transfer is used to synchronize a remote clock to a master clock with femtosecond-level agreement and with a relative time deviation dropping as low as a few hundred attoseconds. Synchronization is shown for a remote clock based on either an optical or microwave oscillator and using either tip-tilt or adaptive-optics freespace optical terminals. The performance is unaltered from optical two-way time transfer in weak turbulence across short links. These results confirm that the two-way reciprocity of the free-space time-of-flight is maintained both under strong turbulence and with the use of adaptive optics. The demonstrated robustness of optical two-way time transfer against strong turbulence and its compatibility with adaptive optics is encouraging for future femtosecond clock synchronization over very long distance ground-to-air free-space paths. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00036951
Volume :
109
Issue :
15
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Applied Physics Letters
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
118817410
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4963130