<p>The TSCAC project is helping to push time standards towards even lower uncertainties</p>
The TSCAC project is helping to push time standards towards even lower uncertainties
The project
The second, the unit for time, is a component of six out of seven SI units. Its accurate measurement is vital across almost all areas of metrology, as well as many every-day applications which rely on precise timekeeping like banking and telecommunications.
Since the 1960s the second has been realised using atomic clocks, devices that measure the frequency of photons absorbed when Caesium-133 atoms transition from the lowest to a higher energy level. Using this measured transition frequency, the second can today be derived to an extremely high degree of accuracy.
In more recent years, new optical clocks (which use optical reference transitions of trapped ions or atoms confined in optical lattices) have reduced the relative measurement uncertainty to as low as 10-19. As the use of optical clocks develops, primary standards which are stable and reliable must be created to support their use, including their possible use in the definition of the second.
EMPIR project Two-species composite atomic clocks (20FUN01, TSCAC) is investigating two-species composite atomic clocks, building on the work of EMPIR projects Coulomb Crystals for Clocks (17FUN07, CC4C) and Robust Optical Clocks for International Timescales (18SIB05, ROCIT).
The project has developed new measurement methods for composite systems, studied clock stabilisation and presented the first realisation of an optical clock using highly-charged ions.
Journal Papers
Further achievements of the project have been published in a number of journal papers:
Project coordinator Nils Huntemann (PTB) has said about the work of the project:
“These great results nicely reflect how the fundamental research conducted in the project is helping optical clocks to not only improve metrological capabilities and enable future primary measurement standards, but also to be used in other areas of research such as the search for dark matter.”
This EMPIR project is co-funded by the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme and the EMPIR Participating States.
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