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Frequency Ratio Measurements with 18-digit Accuracy Using a Network of Optical Clocks

Authors :
Network, Boulder Atomic Clock Optical
Collaboration
Beloy, Kyle
Bodine, Martha I.
Bothwell, Tobias
Brewer, Samuel M.
Bromley, Sarah L.
Chen, Jwo-Sy
Deschênes, Jean-Daniel
Diddams, Scott A.
Fasano, Robert J.
Fortier, Tara M.
Hassan, Youssef S.
Hume, David B.
Kedar, Dhruv
Kennedy, Colin J.
Khader, Isaac
Koepke, Amanda
Leibrandt, David R.
Leopardi, Holly
Ludlow, Andrew D.
McGrew, William F.
Milner, William R.
Newbury, Nathan R.
Nicolodi, Daniele
Oelker, Eric
Parker, Thomas E.
Robinson, John M.
Romisch, Stefania
Schäffer, Stefan A.
Sherman, Jeffrey A.
Sinclair, Laura C.
Sonderhouse, Lindsay
Swann, William C.
Yao, Jian
Ye, Jun
Zhang, Xiaogang
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Atomic clocks occupy a unique position in measurement science, exhibiting higher accuracy than any other measurement standard and underpinning six out of seven base units in the SI system. By exploiting higher resonance frequencies, optical atomic clocks now achieve greater stability and lower frequency uncertainty than existing primary standards. Here, we report frequency ratios of the $^{27}$Al$^+$, $^{171}$Yb and $^{87}$Sr optical clocks in Boulder, Colorado, measured across an optical network spanned by both fiber and free-space links. These ratios have been evaluated with measurement uncertainties between $6\times10^{-18}$ and $8\times10^{-18}$, making them the most accurate reported measurements of frequency ratios to date. This represents a critical step towards redefinition of the SI second and future applications such as relativistic geodesy and tests of fundamental physics.<br />Comment: 51 pages, 12 figures, 6 tables

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2005.14694
Document Type :
Working Paper