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      Resolving the gravitational redshift within a millimeter atomic sample

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          Abstract

          Einstein's theory of general relativity states that clocks at different gravitational potentials tick at different rates - an effect known as the gravitational redshift. As fundamental probes of space and time, atomic clocks have long served to test this prediction at distance scales from 30 centimeters to thousands of kilometers. Ultimately, clocks will study the union of general relativity and quantum mechanics once they become sensitive to the finite wavefunction of quantum objects oscillating in curved spacetime. Towards this regime, we measure a linear frequency gradient consistent with the gravitational redshift within a single millimeter scale sample of ultracold strontium. Our result is enabled by improving the fractional frequency measurement uncertainty by more than a factor of 10, now reaching 7.6×1021. This heralds a new regime of clock operation necessitating intra-sample corrections for gravitational perturbations.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          24 September 2021
          Article
          2109.12238
          45d9ca18-b55c-44aa-a64b-b6903d2b64b6

          http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

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          Custom metadata
          27 pages, 4 figures, 1 table
          physics.atom-ph physics.ins-det quant-ph

          Quantum physics & Field theory,Technical & Applied physics,Atomic & Molecular physics

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