Single-Atom Optical Clock with High Accuracy
Abstract
For the past 50 years, atomic standards based on the frequency of the cesium ground-state hyperfine transition have been the most accurate time pieces in the world. We now report a comparison between the cesium fountain standard NIST-F1, which has been evaluated with an inaccuracy of about 4×10-16, and an optical frequency standard based on an ultraviolet transition in a single, laser-cooled mercury ion for which the fractional systematic frequency uncertainty was below 7.2×10-17. The absolute frequency of the transition was measured versus cesium to be 1 064 721 609 899 144.94 (97) Hz, with a statistically limited total fractional uncertainty of 9.1×10-16, the most accurate absolute measurement of an optical frequency to date.
- Publication:
-
Physical Review Letters
- Pub Date:
- July 2006
- DOI:
- 10.1103/PhysRevLett.97.020801
- Bibcode:
- 2006PhRvL..97b0801O
- Keywords:
-
- 32.30.Jc;
- 06.30.Ft;
- 32.30.Bv;
- Visible and ultraviolet spectra;
- Time and frequency;
- Radio-frequency microwave and infrared spectra