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  1. We study the sensitivity of fixed target experiments to hadronically coupled axionlike particles (ALPs) produced in kaon decays, with a particular emphasis on current and upcoming Short-Baseline Neutrino (SBN) experiments. We demonstrate that below the kaon decay mass threshold ( m a < m K m π ) kaon decay is the dominant production mechanism for ALPs at neutrino experiments, larger by many orders of magnitude than production in pseudoscalar mixing. Such axions can be probed principally by the diphoton and dimuon final states. In the latter case, even if the axion does not couple to muons at tree level, such a coupling is induced by the renormalization group flow from the UV scale. We reinterpret prior results by CHARM and MicroBooNE through these channels and show that they constrain new areas of heavy axion parameter space. We also show projections of the sensitivity of the SBN experiment and Deep Underground Neutrino Experiment (DUNE) to axions through these channels, which reach up to a decade higher in the axion decay constant beyond existing constraints. DUNE projects to have a sensitivity competitive with other world-leading upcoming experiments. Published by the American Physical Society2024 
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  2. We demonstrate the transfer of a cesium frequency standard steered to UTC(NIST) over 20 km of dark telecom optical fiber. Our dissemination scheme uses an active stabilization technique with a phase-locked voltage-controlled oscillator. Out-of-loop characterization of the optical fiber link performance is done with dual-fiber and single-fiber transfer schemes. We observe a fractional frequency instability of 1.5 × 10−12and 2 × 10−15at averaging intervals of 1 s and 105s, respectively, for the link. Both schemes are sufficient to transfer the cesium clock reference without degrading the signal, with nearly an order of magnitude lower fractional frequency instability than the cesium clocks over all time scales. The simplicity of the two-fiber technique may be useful in future long-distance applications where higher stability requirements are not paramount, as it avoids technical complications involved with the single-fiber scheme. 
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