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Dive into the research topics where Thomas E. Parker is active.

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Featured researches published by Thomas E. Parker.


Physical Review Letters | 2003

Testing the stability of fundamental constants with the 199Hg+ single-ion optical clock

S Bize; Scott A. Diddams; U Tanaka; Carol E. Tanner; Windell H. Oskay; Robert E. Drullinger; Thomas E. Parker; Thomas P. Heavner; Steven R. Jefferts; Leo W. Hollberg; Wayne M. Itano; James C. Bergquist

Over a two-year duration, we have compared the frequency of the 199Hg+ 5d(10)6s (2)S(1/2)(F=0)<-->5d(9)6s(2) (2)D(5/2)(F=2) electric-quadrupole transition at 282 nm with the frequency of the ground-state hyperfine splitting in neutral 133Cs. These measurements show that any fractional time variation of the ratio nu(Cs)/nu(Hg) between the two frequencies is smaller than +/-7 x 10(-15) yr(-1) (1sigma uncertainty). According to recent atomic structure calculations, this sets an upper limit to a possible fractional time variation of g(Cs)(m(e)/m(p))alpha(6.0) at the same level.


Metrologia | 2002

Accuracy evaluation of NIST-F1

Steven R. Jefferts; Jon H. Shirley; Thomas E. Parker; Thomas P. Heavner; D.M. Meekhof; C.W. Nelson; Filippo Levi; G Costanzo; A. De Marchi; Robert E. Drullinger; Leo W. Hollberg; W. D. Lee; F.L. Walls

The evaluation procedure of a new laser-cooled caesium fountain primary frequency standard developed at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) is described. The new standard, NIST-F1, is described in some detail and typical operational parameters are discussed. Systematic frequency biases for which corrections are made - second-order Zeeman shift, black-body radiation shift, gravitational red shift and spin-exchange shift - are discussed in detail. Numerous other frequency shifts are evaluated, but are so small in this type of standard that corrections are not made for their effects. We also discuss comparisons of this standard both with local frequency standards and with standards at other national laboratories.


Metrologia | 2005

NIST-F1: recent improvements and accuracy evaluations

Thomas P. Heavner; Steven R. Jefferts; Elizabeth A. Donley; Jon H. Shirley; Thomas E. Parker

In the last several years we have made many improvements to NIST-F1 (a laser-cooled Cs fountain primary frequency standard at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) in Boulder, Colorado) resulting in a reduction by over a factor of 2 in the uncertainty of the realization of the SI second. The two most recent accuracy evaluations of NIST-F1 had combined standard fractional uncertainties of 0.61 × 10 −15 (June 2004) and 0.53 × 10 −15 (January 2005), which were submitted to the Bureau International des Poids et Mesures with total fractional uncertainties (including time-transfer contributions) of, respectively, 0.88 × 10 −15 and 0.97 × 10 −15 . Here we discuss the improvements and evaluation methods and present an updated uncertainty budget.


Metrologia | 2008

The absolute frequency of the 87 Sr optical clock transition

Gretchen K. Campbell; Andrew D. Ludlow; Sebastian Blatt; Jan Thomsen; Michael J. Martin; Marcio H.G. de Miranda; Tanya Zelevinsky; Martin M. Boyd; J. Ye; Scott A. Diddams; Thomas P. Heavner; Thomas E. Parker; Steven R. Jefferts

The absolute frequency of the 1 S0– 3 P0 clock transition of 87 Sr has been measured to be 429 228 004 229 873.65 (37) Hz using lattice-confined atoms, where the fractional uncertainty of 8.6 × 10 −16 represents one of the most accurate measurements of an atomic transition frequency to date. After a detailed study of systematic effects, which reduced the total systematic uncertainty of the Sr lattice clock to 1.5 × 10 −16 , the clock frequency is measured against a hydrogen maser which is simultaneously calibrated to the US primary frequency standard, the NIST Cs fountain clock, NIST-F1. The comparison is made possible using a femtosecond laser based optical frequency comb to phase coherently connect the optical and microwave spectral regions and by a 3.5 km fibre transfer scheme to compare the remotely located clock signals. (Some figures in this article are in colour only in the electronic version)


IEEE Transactions on Ultrasonics Ferroelectrics and Frequency Control | 2000

Assessment of GPS carrier-phase stability for time-transfer applications

Kristine M. Larson; Judah Levine; L M. Nelson; Thomas E. Parker

We have conducted global positioning system (GPS) carrier-phase time-transfer experiments between the master clock (MC) at the U.S. Naval Observatory (USNO) in Washington, DC and the alternate master clock (AMC) at Schriever Air Force Base near Colorado Springs, Colorado. These clocks are also monitored on an hourly basis with two-way satellite time-transfer (TWSTT) measurements. We compared the performance of the GPS carrier phase and TWSTT systems over a 236-d period. Because of power problems and data outages during the carrier-phase experiment, the longest continuous time span is 96 d. The data from this period show agreement with TWSTT within /spl plusmn/1 ns, apart from an overall constant time offset (caused by unknown delays in the GPS hardware at both ends). For averaging times of a day, the carrier-phase and TWSTT systems have a frequency uncertainty of 2.5 and 5.5 parts in 10/sup 15/, respectively.


Metrologia | 2014

First accuracy evaluation of NIST-F2

Thomas P. Heavner; Elizabeth A. Donley; Filippo Levi; Giovanni Antonio Costanzo; Thomas E. Parker; Jon H. Shirley; Neil Ashby; Stephan E. Barlow; Steven R. Jefferts

We report the first accuracy evaluation of NIST-F2, a second-generation laser-cooled caesium fountain primary standard developed at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) with a cryogenic (liquid nitrogen) microwave cavity and flight region. The 80?K atom interrogation environment reduces the uncertainty due to the blackbody radiation shift by more than a factor of 50. Also, the Ramsey microwave cavity exhibits a high quality factor (>50?000) at this low temperature, resulting in a reduced distributed cavity phase shift. NIST-F2 has undergone many tests and improvements since we first began operation in 2008. In the last few years NIST-F2 has been compared against a NIST maser time scale and NIST-F1 (the US primary frequency standard) as part of in-house accuracy evaluations. We report the results of nine in-house comparisons since 2010 with a focus on the most recent accuracy evaluation. This paper discusses the design of the physics package, the laser and optics systems and the accuracy evaluation methods. The type B fractional uncertainty of NIST-F2 is shown to be 0.11???10?15 and is dominated by microwave amplitude dependent effects. The most recent evaluation (August 2013) had a statistical (type A) fractional uncertainty of 0.44???10?15.


Metrologia | 2010

Long-term comparison of caesium fountain primary frequency standards

Thomas E. Parker

There are currently nine caesium fountain primary frequency standards regularly reporting calibrations of International Atomic Time to the Bureau International des Poids et Measures (BIPM). An investigation has been carried out using data from the BIPM publication Circular T to evaluate the frequency differences among these standards and to determine whether these offsets are consistent with the stated uncertainties. The fractional frequency uncertainties of some Cs fountains are now in the range of 4 × 10−16 to 5 × 10−16. The results of this investigation show that the standards agree well with each other. An overall estimate of the caesium frequency is made using the weighted mean of all the fountains.


Physical Review A | 2008

Frequency evaluation of the doubly forbidden 1S0–3P0 transition in bosonic 174Yb

N. Poli; Zeb W. Barber; Nathan D. Lemke; Christopher W. Oates; Long-Sheng Ma; J. E. Stalnaker; Tara M. Fortier; Scott A. Diddams; Leo W. Hollberg; J. C. Bergquist; A. Brusch; Steven R. Jefferts; Thomas P. Heavner; Thomas E. Parker

We report an uncertainty evaluation of an optical lattice clock based on the


international frequency control symposium | 2001

First comparison of remote cesium fountains

Thomas E. Parker; Peter Hetzel; Steven R. Jefferts; S. Weyers; L M. Nelson; Andreas Bauch; Judah Levine

^{1}{S}_{0}\ensuremath{\leftrightarrow}^{3}{P}_{0}


IEEE Transactions on Ultrasonics Ferroelectrics and Frequency Control | 1996

Extremely low thermal noise floor, high power oscillators using surface transverse wave devices

I D. Avramov; F L. Walls; Thomas E. Parker; G.K. Montress

transition in the bosonic isotope

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Steven R. Jefferts

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Thomas P. Heavner

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Jon H. Shirley

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Leo W. Hollberg

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Elizabeth A. Donley

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Judah Levine

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Scott A. Diddams

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Neil Ashby

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Tara M. Fortier

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Victor S. Zhang

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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