English

Probing curved spacetime with a distributed atomic processor clock

Quantum Physics 2025-07-22 v1 General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology Atomic Physics

Abstract

Quantum dynamics on curved spacetime has never been directly probed beyond the Newtonian limit. Although we can describe such dynamics theoretically, experiments would provide empirical evidence that quantum theory holds even in this extreme limit. The practical challenge is the minute spacetime curvature difference over the length scale of the typical extent of quantum effects. Here we propose a quantum network of alkaline earth(-like) atomic processors for constructing a distributed quantum state that is sensitive to the differential proper time between its constituent atomic processor nodes, implementing a quantum observable that is affected by post-Newtonian curved spacetime. Conceptually, we delocalize one clock between three locations by encoding the presence or absence of a clock into the state of the local atoms. By separating three atomic nodes over \simkm-scale elevation differences and distributing one clock between them via a W-state, we demonstrate that the curvature of spacetime is manifest in the interference of the three different proper times that give rise to three distinct beat notes in our non-local observable. We further demonstrate that NN-atom entanglement within each node enhances the interrogation bandwidth by a factor of NN. We discuss how our system can probe new facets of fundamental physics, such as the linearity, unitarity and probabilistic nature of quantum theory on curved spacetime. Our protocol combines several recent advances with neutral atom and trapped ions to realize a novel quantum probe of curved spacetime uniquely enabled by quantum networks.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2502.12954,
  title  = {Probing curved spacetime with a distributed atomic processor clock},
  author = {Jacob P. Covey and Igor Pikovski and Johannes Borregaard},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2502.12954},
  year   = {2025}
}

Comments

8 pages, 5 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-28T21:48:53.209Z