Abstract
We focus on the fact that light-pulse atom interferometers measure the atoms' acceleration with only three data points per drop. As a result, the measured effect of the gravity gradient is systematically larger than the true one, an error linear with the gradient and quadratic in time almost unnoticed so far. We show how this error affects the absolute measurement of the gravitational acceleration $g$ as well as ground and space experiments with gradiometers based on atom interferometry such as those designed for space geodesy, the measurement of the universal constant of gravity and the detection of gravitational waves. When atom interferometers test the universality of free fall and the weak equivalence principle by dropping different isotopes of the same atom one laser interrogates both isotopes and the error reported here cancels out. With atom clouds of different species and two lasers of different frequencies the phase shifts measured by the interferometer differ by a large amount even in absence of violation. Systematic errors, including common mode accelerations coupled to the gravity gradient with the reported error, lead to hard concurrent requirements --on the ground and in space-- on several dimensionless parameters all of which must be smaller than the sought-for violation signal.
Highlights
Light-pulse atom interferometers (AIs) are based on quantum mechanics
The measured effect of the gravity gradient is systematically larger than the true one, an error linear with the gradient and quadratic in time almost unnoticed so far. We show how this error affects the absolute measurement of the gravitational acceleration g as well as ground and space experiments with gradiometers based on atom interferometry such as those designed for space geodesy, the measurement of the universal constant of gravity and the detection of gravitational waves
Systematic errors, including common mode accelerations coupled to the gravity gradient with the reported error, lead to hard concurrent requirements—on the ground and in space—on several dimensionless parameters, all of which must be smaller than the sought-for violation signal
Summary
Light-pulse atom interferometers (AIs) are based on quantum mechanics. As the atoms fall, the atomic wave packet is split, redirected, and recombined via three atom-light interactions at times 0, T , and 2T. Systematic errors in high-precision gravity measurements by light-pulse atom interferometry on the ground and in space
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