Interference of clocks: A quantum twin paradox.
Sina LorianiAlexander FriedrichChristian UfrechtFabio Di PumpoStephan KleinertSven AbendNaceur GaaloulChristian MeinersChristian SchubertDorothee TellÉtienne WodeyMagdalena ZychWolfgang ErtmerAlbert RouraDennis SchlippertWolfgang P SchleichErnst M RaselEnno GiesePublished in: Science advances (2019)
The phase of matter waves depends on proper time and is therefore susceptible to special-relativistic (kinematic) and gravitational (redshift) time dilation. Hence, it is conceivable that atom interferometers measure general-relativistic time-dilation effects. In contrast to this intuition, we show that (i) closed light-pulse interferometers without clock transitions during the pulse sequence are not sensitive to gravitational time dilation in a linear potential. (ii) They can constitute a quantum version of the special-relativistic twin paradox. (iii) Our proposed experimental geometry for a quantum-clock interferometer isolates this effect.