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Phys. Rev. D 51, 319–323 (1995)

Null gravitational redshift experiment with nonidentical atomic clocks

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A. Godone, C. Novero, and P. Tavella
Istituto Elettrotecnico Nazionale G. Ferraris, Strada delle Cacce 91, 10135 Torino, Italy

Received 9 May 1994; published in the issue dated 15 January 1995

A test of the position invariance (LPI) principle embodied in the Einstein equivalence principle (EEP) has been performed via a ‘‘null’’ gravitational redshift experiment. The rate of a magnesium frequency standard has been compared with that of a cesium reference clock searching for a dependence on the solar gravitational potential during a period of 430 days. Because of the Earth’s orbital motion during the experiment, the solar potential in the laboratory had a peak-to-peak variation of 6.7×10-10, allowing us to set an upper limit on the relative frequency variation of 7×10-4 of the external potential. This result represents an improvement of more than one order of magnitude with respect to previous analogous tests of the LPI principle and leads also to a more rigorous limit on a possible spatial variation of the fine-structure constant..

© 1995 The American Physical Society

URL:
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevD.51.319
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevD.51.319
PACS:
04.80.Cc, 06.20.Jr