Fundamental limitations to high-precision tests of the universality of free fall by dropping atoms
Anna M. Nobili

TL;DR
This paper discusses fundamental quantum and systematic limitations in high-precision atom drop experiments testing the universality of free fall, highlighting challenges in achieving the desired sensitivity for detecting potential violations.
Contribution
It analyzes the quantum and systematic constraints affecting atom drop tests of free fall, providing critical requirements for initial conditions and measurement strategies in future experiments.
Findings
Initial condition errors must be minimized and well-characterized.
Systematic offsets between atom clouds can mimic violations and must be controlled.
Measurement duration is constrained by Heisenberg's principle and systematic effects.
Abstract
Tests of the universality of free fall and the weak equivalence principle probe the foundations of General Relativity. Evidence of a violation may lead to the discovery of a new force. The best torsion balance experiments have ruled it out to 10^-13. Cold-atom drop tests have reached 10^-7 and promise to do 7 to 10 orders of magnitude better, on the ground or in space. They are limited by the random shot noise, which depends on the number N of atoms in the clouds. As mass-dropping experiments in the non-uniform gravitational field of Earth, they are sensitive to the initial conditions. Random accelerations due to initial condition errors of the clouds are designed to be at the same level as shot noise, so that they can be reduced with the number of drops along with it. This sets the requirements for the initial position and velocity spreads of the clouds with given N. In the STE-QUEST…
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