| Literature DB >> 27410109 |
Cecilia Clivati, Giacomo Cappellini, Lorenzo F Livi, Francesco Poggiali, Mario Siciliani de Cumis, Marco Mancini, Guido Pagano, Matteo Frittelli, Alberto Mura, Giovanni A Costanzo, Filippo Levi, Davide Calonico, Leonardo Fallani, Jacopo Catani, Massimo Inguscio.
Abstract
Global Positioning System (GPS) dissemination of frequency standards is ubiquitous at present, providing the most widespread time and frequency reference for the majority of industrial and research applications worldwide. On the other hand, the ultimate limits of the GPS presently curb further advances in high-precision, scientific and industrial applications relying on this dissemination scheme. Here, we demonstrate that these limits can be reliably overcome even in laboratories without a local atomic clock by replacing the GPS with a 642-km-long optical fiber link to a remote primary caesium frequency standard. Through this configuration we stably address the <sup>1</sup>S<sub>0</sub>-<sup>3</sup>P<sub>0</sub> clock transition in an ultracold gas of <sup>173</sup>Yb, with a precision that exceeds the possibilities of a GPS-based measurement, dismissing the need for a local clock infrastructure to perform beyond-GPS high-precision tasks. We also report an improvement of two orders of magnitude in the accuracy on the transition frequency reported in literature.Year: 2016 PMID: 27410109 DOI: 10.1364/OE.24.011865
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Opt Express ISSN: 1094-4087 Impact factor: 3.894