研究目的
To demonstrate local optical clock measurements that surpass the current ability to account for the gravitational distortion of space-time across the surface of Earth and to explore the potential of these clocks for geodesy, geophysical phenomena, gravitational waves detection, general relativity testing, and dark matter search.
研究成果
The study demonstrates that optical lattice clocks can achieve systematic uncertainty, measurement instability, and reproducibility at the 10?18 level, enabling beyond-state-of-the-art geodetic measurements and fundamental physics studies. These clocks could be used for precise geopotential determination, exploration of geophysical phenomena, detection of gravitational waves, testing of general relativity, and search for dark matter.
研究不足
The study is limited by the current ability to account for the gravitational distortion of space-time across the surface of Earth. The gravitational redshift transformation to the reference surface of Terrestrial Time (TT) has an uncertainty much larger than the total measurement uncertainty between the clocks, limiting the accuracy of remote clock comparisons.
1:Experimental Design and Method Selection:
The study utilizes two independent ytterbium optical lattice clocks (Yb-1 and Yb-2) to measure time with unprecedented precision. The clocks exploit in-vacuum, room-temperature thermal shields and a one-dimensional optical lattice operating near the 'magic wavelength' to minimize systematic effects.
2:Sample Selection and Data Sources:
Ultracold 171Yb atoms are used, cooled and loaded into optical lattices. The atoms are spin-polarized to suppress collisional shifts.
3:List of Experimental Equipment and Materials:
The setup includes optical lattices, thermal shields, clock lasers stabilized to ultra-low expansion glass cavities, and detection systems for atomic fluorescence.
4:Experimental Procedures and Operational Workflow:
Rabi spectroscopy with an interrogation time of 560 ms is performed on the ultra-narrow 578 nm line. The clock laser is stabilized to a cavity, and the frequency difference between the two clocks is measured.
5:Data Analysis Methods:
The frequency difference is analyzed for systematic uncertainty, measurement instability, and reproducibility. The data is corrected for known systematic effects, including the blackbody radiation shift.
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