| Literature DB >> 27503795 |
C Lisdat1, G Grosche1, N Quintin2, C Shi3, S M F Raupach1, C Grebing1, D Nicolodi3, F Stefani2,3, A Al-Masoudi1, S Dörscher1, S Häfner1, J-L Robyr3, N Chiodo2, S Bilicki3, E Bookjans3, A Koczwara1, S Koke1, A Kuhl1, F Wiotte2, F Meynadier3, E Camisard4, M Abgrall3, M Lours3, T Legero1, H Schnatz1, U Sterr1, H Denker5, C Chardonnet2, Y Le Coq3, G Santarelli6, A Amy-Klein2, R Le Targat3, J Lodewyck3, O Lopez2, P-E Pottie3.
Abstract
Leveraging the unrivalled performance of optical clocks as key tools for geo-science, for astronomy and for fundamental physics beyond the standard model requires comparing the frequency of distant optical clocks faithfully. Here, we report on the comparison and agreement of two strontium optical clocks at an uncertainty of 5 × 10(-17) via a newly established phase-coherent frequency link connecting Paris and Braunschweig using 1,415 km of telecom fibre. The remote comparison is limited only by the instability and uncertainty of the strontium lattice clocks themselves, with negligible contributions from the optical frequency transfer. A fractional precision of 3 × 10(-17) is reached after only 1,000 s averaging time, which is already 10 times better and more than four orders of magnitude faster than any previous long-distance clock comparison. The capability of performing high resolution international clock comparisons paves the way for a redefinition of the unit of time and an all-optical dissemination of the SI-second.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27503795 PMCID: PMC4980484 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms12443
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Figure 1Schematic of the clock comparison.
The strontium lattice clocks are located at the national metrology institutes SYRTE and PTB in Paris and Braunschweig, respectively. The course and lay-out of the fibre link sections to Strasbourg (705 km from Paris, 710 km from Braunschweig) are indicated on the map. Additionally, the individual setups consisting of a clock laser, optical lattice, fs frequency comb, transfer laser and stabilized link are shown schematically. In Strasbourg, the frequency difference between the transfer lasers is measured. For details see the main text and Methods. Country border data available at http://thematicmapping.org/ under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported. Full terms at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/.
Uncertainty budget.
| Clock uncertainty | Sr lattice clock Paris | Sr lattice clock Braunschweig | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Corr. (10−17) | Unc. (10−17) | Corr. (10−17) | Unc. (10−17) | |
| First and higher-order lattice LS | 0 | 2.5 | −1.1 | 1.0 |
| Black-body radiation | 515.5 | 1.8 | 492.9 | 1.3 |
| Black-body radiation oven | 0 | 1.0 | 0.9 | 0.9 |
| Density shift | 0 | 0.8 | 0 | 0.1 |
| Quadratic Zeeman shift | 134.8 | 1.2 | 3.6 | 0.15 |
| Line pulling | 0 | 2.0 | 0 | <<0.1 |
Corr., fractional correction; LS, light shift; Unc., fractional uncertainty.
The numbers vary slightly over the course of the measurement. All uncertainties are 1σ.
*Frequency counters have been synchronized in the second campaign.
†The applied gravity potential correction is −247.2 × 10−17, see text.
Bold entries represent the sum of all the individual contributions listed before rather than another contribution.
Figure 2Instability of the clock comparison.
The instability is expressed as total Allan deviation σ, as a function of averaging time τ for the first (circles; modified Julian date MJD 57092) and second measurement campaign (diamonds; MJD 57177–57198). We attribute the slightly different instabilities to different clock performances. An instability of 1.2 × 10−15 (τ/s)−1/2 is observed during the first campaign (red line). A statistical measurement uncertainty of 2 × 10−17 is thus achieved after only 3,000 s measurement time. The squares with connecting lines show the link's contribution to the statistical uncertainty for the data recorded in the 2nd campaign (see Methods). The error bars indicate 1σ uncertainties.
Figure 3Frequency ratio (−1).
(a) Time trace of the valid data. (b) Aggregate segments of 6,000 s length (1st campaign) and 125,000 s (2nd campaign). Error bars (1σ) include statistical and systematic uncertainties (Table 1). The error bars are dominated by the systematic uncertainty, which is not reduced further by averaging. On average, the clocks agree within the ±1σ interval of uncertainty (shaded area) around the expected result of zero, demonstrating the very good agreement between the two systems.