Litcius/Paper detail

Fundamental Accuracy-Resolution Trade-Off for Timekeeping Devices

Florian Meier, Emanuel Schwarzhans, Paul Erker, Marcus Huber

2023Physical Review Letters20 citationsDOI

Abstract

From a thermodynamic point of view, all clocks are driven by irreversible processes. Additionally, one can use oscillatory systems to temporally modulate the thermodynamic flux towards equilibrium. Focusing on the most elementary thermalization events, this modulation can be thought of as a temporal probability concentration for these events. There are two fundamental factors limiting the performance of clocks: On the one level, the inevitable drifts of the oscillatory system, which are addressed by finding stable atomic or nuclear transitions that lead to astounding precision of today's clocks. On the other level, there is the intrinsically stochastic nature of the irreversible events upon which the clock's operation is based. This becomes relevant when seeking to maximize a clock's resolution at high accuracy, which is ultimately limited by the number of such stochastic events per reference time unit. We address this essential trade-off between clock accuracy and resolution, proving a universal bound for all clocks whose elementary thermalization events are memoryless.

Topics & Concepts

ThermalisationLimitingStatistical physicsPhysicsResolution (logic)Atomic clockComputer scienceProper timeQuantum mechanicsArtificial intelligenceMechanical engineeringEngineeringAdvanced Frequency and Time StandardsCold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein CondensatesAtomic and Subatomic Physics Research