Relativistic red shift with 1 ? 10?16 uncertainty at the NIST, Boulder
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The relativistic red shift for the new caesium fountain at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) at Boulder, USA, has been estimated using two independent methods. Method 1 uses the EGM96 geopotential model to estimate the geopotential number, C, and subsequently the frequency offset, −C/c2 (c being the speed of light), obtaining the value 1797.8 × 10−16 with an estimated standard uncertainty of 1.1 × 10−16. Method 2 uses the geopotential number from the National Geodetic Survey data sheet for the NIST marker and gives a frequency offset of 1798.9 × 10−16, with an estimated standard uncertainty of 0.2 × 10−16.
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