DARPA Making Progress on Miniaturized Atomic Clocks for Future PNT Applications
August 22, 2019 | DARPAEstimated reading time: 5 minutes

Many of today’s communications, navigation, financial transaction, distributed cloud, and defense applications rely on the precision timing of atomic clocks—or clocks that track time based on the oscillation of atoms with the highest degrees of accuracy. Harnessing the power of atoms for precise timing requires a host of sophisticated and bulky technologies that are costly to develop and consume large amounts of energy. New applications and technologies like 5G networks and GPS alternatives will require precise timekeeping on portable platforms, driving a demand for miniaturized atomic clocks with a high degree of performance.
Over the past few decades, DARPA has invested heavily in the advancement and miniaturization of atomic clock technology, generating chip-scale atomic clocks (CSACs) that are now commercially available and offer unprecedented timing stability for their size, weight, and power (SWaP). However, the performance of these first-generation CSACs are fundamentally limited due to the physics associated with their designs. Calibration requirements and frequency drift can generate timing errors, making it difficult to achieve the highest degrees of accuracy and reliability in a portable package. DARPA’s Atomic Clock with Enhanced Stability (ACES) program is exploring the development of next-generation, battery-powered CSACs with 1000x improvement in key performance parameters over existing options.
“Shrinking atomic clocks from large cesium beam tubes to chip-scale devices without eroding performance requires a rethinking of a number of critical components, including vacuum pumps and optical isolators as well as new approaches to component integration,” said Dr. John Burke, the program manager leading ACES in DARPA’s Microsystems Technology Office (MTO). “The target metrics we outlined for the ACES program are lofty, but as we enter the third phase of the program, researchers are already demonstrating engineering successes including reduced SWaP, lab-proven atomic clock technologies, as well as early prototypes of future clock architectures.”
Through the exploration of alternative physics architectures and novel component technologies, three sets of researchers have demonstrated early progress towards creating CSACs with 1000x improvement in temperature control, aging, and retrace.
A paper recently published in Optica highlights recent progress made by a team of researchers from the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), with support from researchers at the California Institute of Technology, Stanford University, and Charles Stark Draper Laboratories. The team has demonstrated an experimental optical atomic clock that is comprised of only three small chips and supporting electronics and optics. Unlike standard atom clocks that operate at microwave frequencies and track the vibrations of cesium atoms, optical atomic clocks run at higher frequencies, offering greater precision because they divide time into smaller units. The NIST team’s clock uses a laser to track the oscillations of rubidium atoms confined in a vapor cell—or tiny glass container—that is 3 millimeters across sitting on top of a silicon chip. Within the clock’s chip-based “heart,” two frequency combs act like gears to convert the rubidium atoms’ high-frequency optical “ticks” to the lower microwave frequency, which is used by most PNT applications to track time. In addition to providing a higher-degree of accuracy (roughly 50 times better than the current cesium-based CSACs), the experimental clock uses very little power—just 275 milliwatts.
In addition to successfully demonstrating a chip-scale optical clock, the NIST team was able to microfabricate all of the key components, much in the same way that computer chips are fabricated. This enables further integration of the electronics and optics while creating a potential path towards mass production and commercialization.
Figure 1: Schematic of the microfabricated photonic optical atomic clock developed by NIST, California Institute of Technology, Stanford University, and Charles Stark Draper Laboratories. Source: NIST
A second team of researchers from Honeywell, working in partnership with University of California, Santa Barbara, is developing precision atomic sensors to support the development of a miniature atomic clock.
Page 1 of 2
Suggested Items
Alphawave Semi Delivers Foundational AI Platform IP for Scale-Up and Scale-Out Networks
04/23/2025 | BUSINESS WIREAlphawave Semi, a global leader in high-speed connectivity and compute silicon for the world’s technology infrastructure, bolsters its leadership in foundational AI silicon connectivity subsystems through silicon proven chiplets and IP subsystems on advanced process nodes and package types. This is set to be showcased at the TSMC 2025 North America Technology Symposium.
Critical Manufacturing, Twinzo Partner to Deliver Real-Time Digital Twin Visualization for Smart Factories
04/23/2025 | Critical ManufacturingCritical Manufacturing, a leading provider of Industry 4.0 focused manufacturing execution systems (MES), has partnered with Twinzo, an innovator in real-time 3D digital twin technology.
Foxconn's Tiger Leap Combining Nature and Technology in Ecological Roof Garden
04/23/2025 | FoxconnHon Hai Technology Group, the world's largest technology manufacturing and service provider, has actively responded to the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
Boeing to Sell Portions of Digital Aviation Solutions to Thoma Bravo for $10.55 Billion
04/22/2025 | BoeingBoeing has entered into a definitive agreement to sell portions of its Digital Aviation Solutions business, including its Jeppesen, ForeFlight, AerData and OzRunways assets, to Thoma Bravo, a leading software investment firm.
CACI Wins Fourth Edison Award for CrossBeam, an American-made Optical Communications Terminal
04/22/2025 | CACI International Inc.CACI International Inc announced that it has been awarded a prestigious bronze Edison Award™ for CrossBeam®, the first and only American-made, Space Development Agency-compliant optical communications terminal (OCT) that provides the U.S. government with reliable data communications for long-distance crosslink applications, from space to the warfighter and back.