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Metrology

Metrology

Ship-based atomic clock passes precision milestone

06 May 2024 Isabelle Dumé
Photo of the three prototype clocks mounted in a rack
All at sea: The prototype clocks. (Courtesy: Will Lunden)

A new ultra-precise atomic clock outperforms existing microwave clocks in time-keeping and sturdiness under real-world conditions. The clock, made by a team of researchers from the California, US-based engineering firm Vector Atomic, exploits the precise frequencies of atomic transitions in iodine molecules and recently passed a three-week trial aboard a ship sailing around Hawaii.

Atomic clocks are the world’s most precise timekeeping devices, and they are essential to staples of modern life such as global positioning systems, telecommunications and data centres. The most common types of atomic clock used in these real-world applications were developed in the 1960s, and they work by measuring the frequency at which atoms oscillate between two energy states. They are often based on caesium atoms, which absorb and emit radiation at microwave frequencies as they oscillate, and the best of them are precise to within one second in 14 billion years – about the age of the universe.

Clocks that absorb and emit at higher, visible, frequencies are even more precise, with timing errors of less than 1 second in 30 billion years. These optical atomic clocks are, however, much bulkier than their microwave counterparts, and their sensitivity to disturbances in their surroundings means they only work properly under well-controlled conditions.

Prototypes based on iodine

The Vector Atomic work, which the team describe in Nature, represents a step towards overturning these limitations. Led by Vector Atomic co-founder and study co-author Jamil-Abo-Shaeer, the team developed three robust optical clock prototypes based on transitions in iodine molecules (I2). These transitions occur at wavelengths conveniently near those of routinely-employed commercial frequency-doubled lasers, and the iodine itself is confined in a vapour cell, doing away with the need to cool atoms to extremely cold temperatures or keep them in an ultrahigh vacuum. With a volume of around 30 litres, the clocks are also compact enough to fit on a tabletop.

While the precision of these prototype optical clocks lags behind that of the best lab-based versions, it is still 1000 times better than clocks of a similar size that ships currently use, says Abo-Shaeer. The prototype clocks are also 100 times more precise than existing microwave clocks of the same size.

Sea trials

The researchers tested their clocks aboard a Royal New Zealand Navy ship, HMNZS Aotearoa, during a three-week voyage around Hawaii. They found that the clocks performed almost as well as in the laboratory, despite the completely different conditions. Indeed, two of the larger devices recorded errors of less than 400 picoseconds (10-12 seconds) over 24 hours.

The team describe the prototypes as a “key building block” for upgrading the world’s timekeeping networks from the nanosecond to the picosecond regime. According to team member Jonathan Roslund, the goal is to build the world’s first fully integrated optical atomic clock with the same “form factor” as a microwave clock, and then demonstrate that it outperforms microwave clocks under real-world conditions.

“Iodine optical clocks are certainly not new,” he tells Physics World. “In fact, one of the very first optical clocks utilized iodine, but researchers moved onto more exotic atoms with better timekeeping properties. Iodine does have a number of attractive properties, however, for making a compact and simple portable optical clock.”

The most finicky parts of any atomic-clock system, Roslund explains, are the lasers, but iodine can rely on industrial-grade lasers operating at both 1064 nm and 1550 nm. “The vapour cell architecture we employ also uses no consumables and requires neither laser cooling nor a pre-stabilization cavity,” Roslund adds.

The next generation

After testing their first-generation clocks on HMNZS Aotearoa, the researchers developed a second-generation device that is 2.5 times more precise. With a volume of just 30 litres including the power supply and computer control, the upgraded version is now a commercial product called Evergreen-30. “We are also hard at work on a 5-litre version targeting the same performance, and an ultracompact 1-litre version,” Roslund reveals.

As well as travelling aboard ships, Roslund says these smaller clocks could have applications in airborne and space-based systems. They might also make a scientific impact: “We have just finished an exciting demonstration in collaboration with the University of Arizona, in which our Evergreen-30 clocks served as the timebase for a radio observatory in the Event Horizon Telescope Array, which is imaging distant supermassive blackholes.”

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