Erdmessung mit Quanten und Relativit\"at
J\"urgen M\"uller

TL;DR
This paper explores innovative quantum and relativistic techniques, such as atomic interferometry and optical clocks, to enhance geodetic measurements of Earth's gravity and potential fields, promising increased precision and new applications.
Contribution
It introduces recent advances in quantum and relativistic methods for geodesy, highlighting their potential to improve gravity field observations and potential measurements.
Findings
Quantum gravimetry using atomic interferometry offers refined gravity anomaly detection.
Relativistic geodesy with optical clocks enables long-distance potential measurements.
Laser interferometry techniques from gravitational wave detection are adapted for geodetic use.
Abstract
Recent developments in fundamental physics (in theory as well as in technology) provide novel capabilities for geodetic applications such as refined observations of the Earth`s gravity field. We will focus on two new concepts: one applies atomic interferometry for (satellite) gravimetry, the other uses clock measurements for observing potential values. In the first case, gravity anomalies are determined by observing free-falling atoms (quantum gravimetry), such technique can also be applied for future gradiometric measurements in space. In the second case according to Einstein`s theory of general relativity, frequency comparisons of highly precise optical clocks give access to differences of the gravity potential, even over long distances (relativistic geodesy). Also laser interferometry between test masses in space with nanometer accuracy belongs to these novel concepts. For the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Frequency and Time Standards
