A quantum network of entangled optical atomic clocks
B. C. Nichol, R. Srinivas, D. P. Nadlinger, P. Drmota, D. Main, G., Araneda, C. J. Ballance, and D. M. Lucas

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a quantum network of two entangled optical atomic clocks separated by 2 meters, showing enhanced measurement precision that surpasses classical limits, with potential for scalable quantum metrology.
Contribution
First experimental realization of a remote entangled optical clock network using photonic links, achieving Heisenberg-limited measurement enhancement.
Findings
Entanglement reduces measurement uncertainty by nearly √2.
Entangled clocks halve the number of measurements needed for a given precision.
Enhanced measurement sensitivity is especially significant under laser dephasing conditions.
Abstract
Optical atomic clocks are our most precise tools to measure time and frequency. They enable precision frequency comparisons between atoms in separate locations to probe the space-time variation of fundamental constants, the properties of dark matter, and for geodesy. Measurements on independent systems are limited by the standard quantum limit (SQL); measurements on entangled systems, in contrast, can surpass the SQL to reach the ultimate precision allowed by quantum theory - the so-called Heisenberg limit. While local entangling operations have been used to demonstrate this enhancement at microscopic distances, frequency comparisons between remote atomic clocks require rapid high-fidelity entanglement between separate systems that have no intrinsic interactions. We demonstrate the first quantum network of entangled optical clocks using two Sr ions separated by a macroscopic…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Frequency and Time Standards · Atomic and Subatomic Physics Research · Cold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein Condensates
