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Ultra-stable laser with average fractional frequency drift rate below $5\times10^{-19}/\mathrm{s}$

Cryogenic single-crystal optical cavities have the potential to provide highest dimensional stability. We have investigated the long-term performance of an ultra-stable laser system which is stabilized to a single-crystal silicon cavity operated at 124 K. Utilizing a frequency comb, the laser is compared to a hydrogen maser that is referenced to a primary caesium fountain standard and to the $^{87}\mathrm{Sr}$ optical lattice clock at PTB. With fractional frequency instabilities of $σ_y(τ)\leq2\times10^{-16}$ for averaging times of $τ=60\mathrm{~s}$ to $1000\mathrm{~s}$ and $σ_y(1 \mathrm{d})\leq 2\times10^{-15}$ the stability of this laser, without any aid from an atomic reference, surpasses the best microwave standards for short averaging times and is competitive with the best hydrogen masers for longer times of one day. The comparison of modeled thermal response of the cavity with measured data indicates a fractional frequency drift below $5\times 10^{-19}/\mathrm{s}$, which we do not expect to be a fundamental limit.

preprint2014arXivOpen access
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