Time has always had a special status in physics because of its fundamental role in specifying the regularities of nature and because of the extraordinary precision with which it can be measured. This precision enables tests of fundamental physics and cosmology, as well as practical applications such as satellite navigation. Recently, a regime of operation for atomic clocks based on optical transitions has become possible, promising even higher performance. We report the frequency ratio of two optical atomic clocks with a fractional uncertainty of 5.2 x 10(-17). The ratio of aluminum and mercury single-ion optical clock frequencies nuAl+/nuHg+ is 1.052871833148990438(55), where the uncertainty comprises a statistical measurement uncertainty of 4.3 x 10(-17), and systematic uncertainties of 1.9 x 10(-17) and 2.3 x 10(-17) in the mercury and aluminum frequency standards, respectively. Repeated measurements during the past year yield a preliminary constraint on the temporal variation of the fine-structure constant alpha of alpha/alpha = (-1.6+/-2.3) x 10(-17)/year.
The 1S0-3P0 clock transition frequency nuSr in neutral 87Sr has been measured relative to the Cs standard by three independent laboratories in Boulder, Paris, and Tokyo over the last three years. The agreement on the 1 x 10(-15) level makes nuSr the best agreed-upon optical atomic frequency. We combine periodic variations in the 87Sr clock frequency with 199Hg+ and H-maser data to test local position invariance by obtaining the strongest limits to date on gravitational-coupling coefficients for the fine-structure constant alpha, electron-proton mass ratio mu, and light quark mass. Furthermore, after 199Hg+, 171Yb+, and H, we add 87Sr as the fourth optical atomic clock species to enhance constraints on yearly drifts of alpha and mu.
We report a frequency measurement of the 1 S0 − 3 P0 transition of 87 Sr atoms in an optical lattice clock. The frequency is determined to be 429 228 004 229 879 (5) Hz with a fractional uncertainty that is comparable to state-of-the-art optical clocks with neutral atoms in free fall. Two previous measurements of this transition were found to disagree by about 2 × 10 −13 , i.e. almost four times the combined error bar, instilling doubt on the potential of optical lattice clocks to perform at a high accuracy level. In perfect agreement with one of these two values, our measurement essentially dissipates this doubt.PACS numbers: 06.30. Ft,42.50.Hz,42.62.Fi Recent advances in the field of optical frequency metrology make measurements with a fractional accuracy of 10 −17 or better a realistic short term goal [1]. Among other possible applications (e.g. a redefinition of the S.I. second, optical very long baseline interferometry in space, direct mapping of the earth gravitational using the Einstein effect,...), a very interesting prospect with measurements at that level is a reproducible test of Einstein Equivalence Principle by the repeated determination of the frequency ratio of different atomic and molecular transitions [2,3,4,5,6,7]. The topicality of such a test has recently been renewed by measurements at the cosmological scale which seem to indicate a slow variation of the electron to proton mass ratio [8]. The richness of the test directly depends on the performance of the clocks that are used but also on the variety of clock transitions and atomic species on which high accuracy frequency standards are based.In that context, optical lattice clocks are expected to play a central role in the future of this field. They use a large number of atoms confined in the Lamb-Dicke regime by an optical lattice in which the first order perturbation of the clock transition cancels [9]. Due to the lattice confinement motional effects, which set a severe limitation to standards with neutral atoms in free fall [10,11], essentially vanish [12]. This gives hope for a ultimate fractional accuracy better than 10 −17 . On the other hand, the large number of atoms in an optical lattice clock in principle opens the way to a short term fractional frequency stability significantly better than 10 −15 τ −1/2 with τ the averaging time in seconds. In this regime the coherence time of the laser frequency locked to the clock transition would be several seconds, possibly tens of seconds [25]. Such a long coherence time could for instance be used to reduce the width of the optical resonances in single ion clocks down to or below the 0.1 Hz range opening new prospects for these devices also. Finally, the optical lattice clock scheme is in principle applicable to a large number of atomic species (Sr, Yb, Hg, Ca, Mg,...) which is a key feature for the fundamental test discussed above. It is then particularly problematic that the frequency delivered by the first two evaluated optical lattice clocks, which both use 87 Sr, disagree by about 2 × ...
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