Transportable strontium lattice clock with 4 × 10-19 blackbody radiation shift uncertainty

Abstract

We describe a transportable optical lattice clock based on the 1S0 → 3P0 transition of lattice-trapped 87Sr atoms with a total systematic uncertainty of 2.1 × 10-18. The blackbody radiation shift, which is the leading systematic effect in many strontium lattice clocks, is controlled at the level of 4.0 × 10-19, as the atoms are interrogated inside a well-characterised, cold thermal shield. Using a transportable clock laser, the clock reaches a frequency instability of about 5 × 10-16/τ/s, which enables fast reevaluations of systematic effects. By comparing this clock to the primary caesium fountain clocks CSF1 and CSF2 at Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt, we measure the clock transition frequency with a fractional uncertainty of 1.9× 10-16, in agreement with previous results. The clock was successfully transported and operated at different locations. It holds the potential to be used for geodetic measurements with centimetre-level or better height resolution and for accurate inter-institute frequency comparisons.

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