4.8 Article

Frequency ratio measurements at 18-digit accuracy using an optical clock network

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NATURE
卷 591, 期 7851, 页码 564-+

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NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-021-03253-4

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  1. National Institute of Standards and Technology
  2. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency
  3. Air Force Office for Scientific Research
  4. National Science Foundation (NSF) [PHY-1734006]
  5. Office of Naval Research (ONR) [N00014-18-1-2634]
  6. NASA Fundamental Physics
  7. Department of Energy, Office of Science HEP QuantISED award

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The study successfully measured frequency ratios with a high level of precision using an optical clock network, laying the foundation for future networks and providing important information for testing physical laws and improving international timekeeping.
Atomic clocks are vital in a wide array of technologies and experiments, including tests of fundamental physics(1). Clocks operating at optical frequencies have now demonstrated fractional stability and reproducibility at the 10(-18) level, two orders of magnitude beyond their microwave predecessors(2). Frequency ratio measurements between optical clocks are the basis for many of the applications that take advantage of this remarkable precision. However, the highest reported accuracy for frequency ratio measurements has remained largely unchanged for more than a decade(3-5). Here we operate a network of optical clocks based on Al-27(+) (ref.(6)), Sr-87 (ref.(7)) and Yb-171 (ref.(8)), and measure their frequency ratios with fractional uncertainties at or below 8 x 10(-18). Exploiting this precision, we derive improved constraints on the potential coupling of ultralight bosonic dark matter to standard model fields(9,10). Our optical clock network utilizes not just optical fibre(11), but also a 1.5-kilometre free-space link(12,13). This advance in frequency ratio measurements lays the groundwork for future networks of mobile, airborne and remote optical clocks that will be used to test physical laws(1), perform relativistic geodesy(14) and substantially improve international timekeeping(15).

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