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A Clock Directly Linking Time to a Particle's Mass
123
Citations
22
References
2013
Year
Precision MeasurementTime DisseminationEngineeringPhysicsMeasurementNatural SciencesSpecial RelativityParticle PhysicsEinstein TelescopeExperimental GravitySi UnitsTime MetrologyTimed SystemClock SynchronizationOscillation FrequenciesFundamental PhysicTime MeasurementsMolecular Clocks
Historically, time measurements have been based on oscillation frequencies in systems of particles, from the motion of celestial bodies to atomic transitions. Relativity and quantum mechanics show that even a single particle of mass m determines a Compton frequency ω(0) = mc(2)/[formula: see text] where c is the speed of light and [formula: see text] is Planck's constant h divided by 2π. A clock referenced to ω(0) would enable high-precision mass measurements and a fundamental definition of the second. We demonstrate such a clock using an optical frequency comb to self-reference a Ramsey-Bordé atom interferometer and synchronize an oscillator at a subharmonic of ω(0.) This directly demonstrates the connection between time and mass. It allows measurement of microscopic masses with 4 × 10(-9) accuracy in the proposed revision to SI units. Together with the Avogadro project, it yields calibrated kilograms.
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