New Paper
Evaluation of long term performance of continuously running atomic fountains. Metrologia 51 263-269
An ensemble of rubidium atomic fountain clocks has been put into operation at the US Naval Observatory (USNO). These fountains are used as continuous clocks in the manner of commercial caesium beams and hydrogen masers for the purpose of improved timing applications. Four fountains have been in operation for more than two years and are included in the ensemble used to generate the USNO master clock. Individual fountain performance is characterized by a white-frequency noise level below 2 × 10^−13 and fractional-frequency stability routinely reaching the low 10^−16 s. The highest performing pair of fountains exhibits stability consistent with each fountain integrating as white frequency noise, with Allan deviation surpassing 6 × 10^−17 at 10^7 s, and with no relative drift between the fountains at the level of 7.5 × 10^−19/day. As an ensemble, the fountains generate a timescale with white-frequency noise level of 1 × 10^−13 and long-term frequency stability consistent with zero drift relative to the world’s primary standards at 1 × 10^−18/day. The rubidium fountains are reported to the BIPM as continuously running clocks, as opposed to secondary standards, the only cold-atom clocks so reported. Here we further characterize the performance of the individual fountains and the ensemble during the first two years in an operational environment, presenting the first look at long-term continuous behavior of fountain clocks.
I bolded something I harp on occasionally: these clocks are actually run as, and are reported as, clocks. For all of the awesome performance of other devices that grab pop-sci article space, they don’t run continuously and aren’t described as clocks when it comes to the data that get reported to the international standards lab.