Abstract
Abstract
The collisional frequency shift is a dominant contribution to the uncertainty of many caesium fountain clocks. Minimizing the effect can be difficult, as lowering the atomic density comes at the cost of a reduced signal-to-noise ratio. Also, it is typically not atomic density, but total atom number that is measured in the experiment, which can lead to a potential measurement bias. In this paper, we describe a direct measurement of the atomic density using absorption imaging of the atomic cloud. For the caesium fountain clock, NRC-FCs2, at the National Research Council Canada, these measurements have led to a reduction in the uncertainty due to the collisional shift by a factor of 10.