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  • 2019 Conference on Lasers and Electro-Optics Europe and European Quantum Electronics Conference
  • OSA Technical Digest (Optica Publishing Group, 2019),
  • paper ed_6_1

Ultimate quantum noise limit of frequency comb measurements

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Abstract

Frequency comb measurements have enormously progressed in the last decade, with 10−18 precisions coming into reach [1]. Similar to Moore’s law, the precision in frequency metrology measurements has improved by about 3 orders of magnitude in a little bit more than a decade. Along these lines, the question may arise whether there will be continuous improvements for decades to come --- or whether, at one point, an ultimate limitation to further improvement arises. Moreover, frequency metrology has proven superior to other methods to evince a drift of fundamental physical constants, e.g., the fine-structure constants, yet no such drift has ever been convincingly proven using either optical [2] or cosmological methods [3]. So the question is: how low can we go before quantum effects impose an ultimate limit for precision frequency metrology?

© 2019 IEEE

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