Atomic clock performance beyond the geodetic limit
W. F. McGrew, X. Zhang, R. J. Fasano, S. A. Sch\"affer, K. Beloy, D., Nicolodi, R. C. Brown, N. Hinkley, G. Milani, M. Schioppo, T. H. Yoon, and A., D. Ludlow

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates optical atomic clocks surpassing current limits in accounting for Earth's gravitational effects, achieving unprecedented precision and stability, and enabling advanced geophysical and fundamental physics applications.
Contribution
The authors achieve record-breaking optical clock performance that exceeds Earth's gravitational measurement capabilities, opening new avenues for geodesy and fundamental physics tests.
Findings
Systematic uncertainty of 1.4×10⁻¹⁸
Measurement instability of 3.2×10⁻¹⁹
Reproducibility with ten blinded frequency comparisons
Abstract
The passage of time is tracked by counting oscillations of a frequency reference, such as Earth's revolutions or swings of a pendulum. By referencing atomic transitions, frequency (and thus time) can be measured more precisely than any other physical quantity, with the current generation of optical atomic clocks reporting fractional performance below the level. However, the theory of relativity prescribes that the passage of time is not absolute, but impacted by an observer's reference frame. Consequently, clock measurements exhibit sensitivity to relative velocity, acceleration and gravity potential. Here we demonstrate optical clock measurements surpassing the present-day ability to account for the gravitational distortion of space-time across the surface of Earth. In two independent ytterbium optical lattice clocks, we demonstrate unprecedented levels in three fundamental…
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