TY - JOUR AU - Eric Oelker AU - Ross Hutson AU - C. Kennedy AU - Lindsay Sonderhouse AU - Tobias Bothwell AU - Akihisa Goban AU - Dhruv Kedar AU - Christian Sanner AU - J. Robinson AU - Edward Marti AU - Dan-Gheorghita Matei AU - Thomas Legero AU - M. Giunta AU - Ronald Holzwarth AU - Fritz Riehle AU - Uwe Sterr AU - Jun Ye AB - Optical atomic clocks require local oscillators with exceptional optical coherence owing to the challenge of performing spectroscopy on their ultranarrow-linewidth clock transitions. Advances in laser stabilization have thus enabled rapid progress in clock precision. A new class of ultrastable lasers based on cryogenic silicon reference cavities has recently demonstrated the longest optical coherence times to date. Here we utilize such a local oscillator with two strontium (Sr) optical lattice clocks to achieve an advance in clock stability. Through an anti-synchronous comparison, the fractional instability of both clocks is assessed to be 4.8x10-17/√τ for an averaging time τ(in seconds). Synchronous interrogation enables each clock to average at a rate of 3.5x10-17/√τ, dominated by quantum projection noise, and reach an instability of 6.6 x 10-19 over an hour-long measurement. The ability to resolve sub-10-18-level frequency shifts in such short timescales will affect a wide range of applications for clocks in quantum sensing and fundamental physics. BT - Nature Photonics DA - 2019-07 DO - 10.1038/s41566-019-0493-4 N2 - Optical atomic clocks require local oscillators with exceptional optical coherence owing to the challenge of performing spectroscopy on their ultranarrow-linewidth clock transitions. Advances in laser stabilization have thus enabled rapid progress in clock precision. A new class of ultrastable lasers based on cryogenic silicon reference cavities has recently demonstrated the longest optical coherence times to date. Here we utilize such a local oscillator with two strontium (Sr) optical lattice clocks to achieve an advance in clock stability. Through an anti-synchronous comparison, the fractional instability of both clocks is assessed to be 4.8x10-17/√τ for an averaging time τ(in seconds). Synchronous interrogation enables each clock to average at a rate of 3.5x10-17/√τ, dominated by quantum projection noise, and reach an instability of 6.6 x 10-19 over an hour-long measurement. The ability to resolve sub-10-18-level frequency shifts in such short timescales will affect a wide range of applications for clocks in quantum sensing and fundamental physics. PY - 2019 EP - 714–719 T2 - Nature Photonics TI - Demonstration of 4.8 x 10^(-17) stability at 1s for two independent optical clocks UR - https://www.nature.com/articles/s41566-019-0493-4$\#$Abs1 VL - 13 SN - 1749-4885 ER -