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The new technique of measuring frequency by optical lattice clocks now approaches to the relative precision of $(Delta f/f)=O(10^{-18})$. We propose to place such precise clocks in space and to use Doppler tracking method for detecting low-frequency gravitational wave below 1 Hz. Our idea is to locate three spacecrafts at one A.U. distance (say at L1, L4 & L5 of the Sun-Earth orbit), and apply the Doppler tracking method by communicating the time each other. Applying the current available technologies, we obtain the sensitivity for gravitational wave with three or four-order improvement ($h_{rm n}sim 10^{-17}$ or $10^{-18}$ level in $10^{-5}$Hz -- $1$ Hz) than that of Cassini spacecraft in 2001. This sensitivity enables us to observe black-hole mergers of their mass greater than $10^5 M_odot$ in the cosmological scale. Based on the hierarchical growth model of black-holes in galaxies, we estimate the event rate of detection will be 20-50 a year. We nickname INO (Interplanetary Network of Optical Lattice Clocks) for this system, named after Tadataka Ino (1745--1818), a Japanese astronomer, cartographer, and geodesist.
We propose a space-based gravitational wave detector consisting of two spatially separated, drag-free satellites sharing ultra-stable optical laser light over a single baseline. Each satellite contains an optical lattice atomic clock, which serves as
We report on the first earth-scale quantum sensor network based on optical atomic clocks aimed at dark matter (DM) detection. Exploiting differences in the susceptibilities to the fine-structure constant of essential parts of an optical atomic clock,
Electrometry is performed using Rydberg states to evaluate the quadratic Stark shift of the $5s^2$ $^1textrm{S}_0-5s5p$ $^3textrm{P}_0$ clock transition in strontium. By measuring the Stark shift of the highly excited $5s75d;^1textrm{D}_2$ state usin
Recent realisation of three-dimensional optical lattice clocks circumvents short range collisional clock shifts which have been the bottle neck towards higher precision; the long range electronic dipole-dipole interaction between the atoms becomes th
Progress in realizing the SI second had multiple technological impacts and enabled to further constraint theoretical models in fundamental physics. Caesium microwave fountains, realizing best the second according to its current definition with a rela