Scalar Gravitational Aharonov-Bohm Effect: Generalization of the Gravitational Redshift
Michael E Tobar, Michael T Hatzon, Graeme R Flower, Maxim Goryachev

TL;DR
This paper explores a gravitational analog of the Aharonov-Bohm effect, predicting that atomic clocks in varying gravitational potentials exhibit frequency shifts and modulation sidebands, extending the understanding of gravitational influences on quantum systems.
Contribution
It generalizes the gravitational Aharonov-Bohm effect to atomic clocks, predicting measurable frequency shifts and sidebands caused by time-varying scalar gravitational potentials.
Findings
Atomic clocks in eccentric orbits show frequency shifts due to gravitational redshift.
Time-varying gravitational potentials induce modulation sidebands in atomic clock signals.
The analysis links mass-energy equivalence to gravitational phase effects in quantum systems.
Abstract
The Aharonov-Bohm effect is a quantum mechanical phenomenon that demonstrates how potentials can have observable effects even when the classical fields associated with those potentials are absent. Initially proposed for electromagnetic interactions, this effect has been experimentally confirmed and extensively studied over the years. More recently, the effect has been observed in the context of gravitational interactions using atom interferometry. Additionally, recent predictions suggest that temporal variations in the phase of an electron wave function will induce modulation sidebands in the energy levels of an atomic clock, solely driven by a time-varying scalar gravitational potential [1]. In this study, we consider the atomic clock as a two-level system undergoing continuous Rabi oscillations between the electron's ground and excited state. We assume the photons driving the…
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