Hybrid fiber link achieves 4×10^{-21} frequency transfer stability over 43 km, verifies noise reciprocity to 3×10^{-20}, and reports first evidence of low-frequency interferometric noise.
Geodesy and metrology with a transportable optical clock
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abstract
The advent of novel measurement instrumentation can lead to paradigm shifts in scientific research. Optical atomic clocks, due to their unprecedented stability and uncertainty, are already being used to test physical theories and herald a revision of the International System of units (SI). However, to unlock their potential for cross-disciplinary applications such as relativistic geodesy, a major challenge remains. This is their transformation from highly specialized instruments restricted to national metrology laboratories into flexible devices deployable in different locations. Here we report the first field measurement campaign performed with a ubiquitously applicable $^{87}$Sr optical lattice clock. We use it to determine the gravity potential difference between the middle of a mountain and a location 90 km apart, exploiting both local and remote clock comparisons to eliminate potential clock errors. A local comparison with a $^{171}$Yb lattice clock also serves as an important check on the international consistency of independently developed optical clocks. This campaign demonstrates the exciting prospects for transportable optical clocks.
fields
quant-ph 1years
2019 1verdicts
UNVERDICTED 1representative citing papers
citing papers explorer
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Studying fundamental limit of optical fiber links to $10^{-21}$ level
Hybrid fiber link achieves 4×10^{-21} frequency transfer stability over 43 km, verifies noise reciprocity to 3×10^{-20}, and reports first evidence of low-frequency interferometric noise.