Researchers from the Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt (PTB) have analyzed 
the noise processes in their optical atomic lattice clock with neutral 
strontium atoms.  The clock's stability enables high-precision measurements in 
a short time.

PTB's atomic lattice clock aims to facilitate the future reduction of the total 
measurement uncertainty down to a few parts in 1018.

The analysis proves that the optical atomic clock has reached the best 
stability worldwide thanks to a laser system whose frequency is extremely 
stable.

In the research community, optical clocks have been attracting increasing 
interest. They could allow the SI base unit of time, the second, to be realized 
with even greater accuracy in future and thus replace the current definition 
which is based on the interaction between microwave radiation and cesium atoms. 
The most highly precise clocks, however, cover a wide range of applications 
which range from geodesy (where they allow the direct and more accurate 
measurement of the gravitational potential of the Earth), to the investigation 
of the “great questions” of modern physics (such as a unified theory of the 
fundamental interactions) by searching for possible variations in fundamental 
constants (e.g. the fine-structure constant) by comparing diverse clocks with 
each other.

The accuracy and the stability of optical clocks are mainly based on the fact 
that the frequency of the optical radiation used is higher (by several orders 
of magnitude) than that of the microwave radiation which is used in cesium 
atomic clocks, which makes optical clocks much more precise than cesium clocks. 
In a strontium clock, laser cooling is used to slow an atomic gas down to 
temperatures near absolute zero. Then, an extremely narrow transition between 
long-lived eigenstates of the atoms is excited in order to stabilize the 
frequency of the excitation laser to that of the atoms. The simultaneous 
interrogation of numerous atoms leads to a particularly high signal-to-noise 
ratio and, thus, to high stability.

However, since an atomic cloud must be prepared after each interrogation, 
interruptions in the observation of the laser frequency occur. The laser itself 
hence serves as a 'flywheel' and is commonly pre-stabilized to an optical 
resonator which keeps the laser frequency stable over short periods of time. 
The scientists from PTB have therefore developed a resonator whose frequency is 
among the most stable worldwide: with a length of 48 cm and ingenious thermal 
and mechanical isolation from its environment, it reaches a fractional 
frequency instability of 8 × 10-17.

The scientists analyzed the individual contributions to noise of the detected 
excitation probabilities of their clock. Based on their analysis, PTB's 
strontium clock attains the quantum projection noise limit, which is due to the 
laws of physics, with as few as 130 atoms. This noise results from the state 
measurement itself, since after excitation, each atom is first in a 
superposition of the two eigenstates and is randomly projected into one of the 
two states only when the measurement is performed.

To analyze the clock's instability, the model derived from this was 
supplemented by the known influence of the laser frequency noise, and its 
prediction was experimentally verified by a self-comparison of the clock. From 
this, the scientists at PTB derived a fractional instability in normal 
operation amounting to 1.6 × 10-16/t1/2 as a function of the averaging time t 
in seconds. This is the best published value for an atomic clock so far. It is 
expected to considerably facilitate the further reduction of the total 
uncertainty of the strontium clock down to a few parts in 1018.

http://www.tm-eetimes.com/en/strontium-clock-offer-high-precision-measurement-advance.html?cmp_id=7&news_id=222920136

Met vriendelijke groeten
Regards
Frans

[email protected]
http://ElectronicsAndBooks.com
Netherlands

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