Demonstration of a Mobile Optical Clock Ensemble at Sea
A. P. Hilton, R. F. Offer, E. Klantsataya, S. K. Scholten, N. Bourbeau H\'ebert, C. Billington, C. Locke, C. Perrella, M. Nelligan, J. W. Allison, B. White, E. Ahern, K. W. Martin, R. Beard, J. D. Elgin, B. M. Sparkes, and A. N. Luiten

TL;DR
This paper reports the successful deployment and testing of three different optical atomic clocks at sea, demonstrating their reliability and superior performance in real-world maritime conditions, advancing their practical use beyond laboratories.
Contribution
It presents the first trial of multiple optical clocks operating at sea, showing their robustness and potential for real-world applications outside laboratory settings.
Findings
Clocks maintained high stability over weeks at sea
Performance exceeded commercial solutions in accuracy
Demonstrated reliability in maritime environment
Abstract
Atomic clocks are at the leading edge of accuracy and precision and are essential for synchronization of distributed critical infrastructure, position, navigation and timing, and scientific applications. There has been a breakthrough in the performance of atomic clocks with the shift from microwave to optical frequency transitions. However, this performance increase has come at the cost of size, complexity and fragility, which has confined optical clocks to laboratories. Here we report on a recent international collaboration where three emerging optical clocks, each based on different operating principles, were trialled at sea. Over weeks of unsupervised naval operation, these clocks demonstrated exceptional reliability and provided frequency stability outputs in optical, microwave and radio-frequency domains. The performance of all three devices was orders of magnitude superior to…
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