Litcius/Paper detail

Testing the Einstein equivalence principle with two Earth-orbiting clocks

Dmitry Litvinov, Sergey Pilipenko

2021Classical and Quantum Gravity16 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract We consider the problem of testing the Einstein equivalence principle (EEP) by measuring the gravitational redshift with two Earth-orbiting stable atomic clocks. For a reasonably restricted class of orbits we find an optimal experiment configuration that provides for the maximum accuracy of measuring the relevant EEP violation parameter. The perigee height of such orbits is ∼1000 km and the period is 3–5 h, depending on the clock type. For the two of the current best space-qualified clocks, the VCH-1010 hydrogen maser and the PHARAO cesium fountain clock, the achievable experiment accuracy is, respectively, 1 × 10 −7 and 5 × 10 −8 after 3 years of data accumulation. This is more than 2 orders of magnitude better than achieved in Gravity Probe A and GREAT missions as well as expected for the RadioAstron gravitational redshift experiment. Using an anticipated future space-qualified clock with a performance of the current laboratory optical clocks, an accuracy of 3 × 10 −10 is reachable.

Topics & Concepts

PhysicsEquivalence principle (geometric)EinsteinAtomic clockGravity Probe AMaserWeak equivalenceTests of general relativityRedshiftGravitationGravitational redshiftCurrent (fluid)Hydrogen maserEquivalence (formal languages)Theoretical physicsAstrophysicsTerm (time)Classical mechanicsQuantum mechanicsSkyGeneral relativityGravitational fieldOrbit (dynamics)Einstein TelescopeAdvanced Frequency and Time StandardsPulsars and Gravitational Waves ResearchRelativity and Gravitational Theory