Frontiers in Physics (Dec 2022)

Toward a high-precision mass–energy test of the equivalence principle with atom interferometers

  • Lin Zhou,
  • Lin Zhou,
  • Si-Tong Yan,
  • Si-Tong Yan,
  • Yu-Hang Ji,
  • Chuan He,
  • Jun-Jie Jiang,
  • Jun-Jie Jiang,
  • Zhuo Hou,
  • Zhuo Hou,
  • Run-Dong Xu,
  • Qi Wang,
  • Qi Wang,
  • Zhi-Xin Li,
  • Zhi-Xin Li,
  • Dong-Feng Gao,
  • Dong-Feng Gao,
  • Min Liu,
  • Min Liu,
  • Wei-Tou Ni,
  • Jin Wang,
  • Jin Wang,
  • Jin Wang,
  • Ming-Sheng Zhan,
  • Ming-Sheng Zhan,
  • Ming-Sheng Zhan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fphy.2022.1039119
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

Read online

The equivalence principle (EP) is a basic assumption of the general relativity. The quantum test of the equivalence principle with atoms is an important way to examine the applicable scope of the current physical framework so as to discover new physics. Recently, we extended the traditional pure mass or energy tests of the equivalence principle to the joint test of mass–energy by atom interferometry (Zhou et al.,Phys.Rev.A 104,022822). The violation parameter of mass is constrained to η0 = (−0.8 ± 1.4) × 10–10 and that of internal energy to ηE = (0.0 ± 0.4) × 10–10 per reduced energy ratio. Here, we first briefly outline the joint test idea and experimental results, and then, we analyze and discuss how to improve the test accuracy. Finally, we report the latest experimental progress toward a high-precision mass–energy test of the equivalence principle. We realize atom interference fringes of 2T = 2.6 s in the 10-m long-baseline atom interferometer. This free evolution time T, to the best of our knowledge, is the longest duration realized in the laboratory, and the corresponding resolution of gravity measurement is 4.5 × 10−11 g per shot.

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