Controlling 229 Th isomeric state population in a VUV transparent crystal

The radioisotope thorium-229 ( Th) is renowned for its extraordinarily low-energy, long-lived nuclear first-excited state. This isomeric state can be excited by vacuum ultraviolet (VUV) lasers and Th has been proposed as a reference transition for ultra-precise nuclear clocks. To assess the feasibil...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2024-07, Vol.15 (1), p.5536
Hauptverfasser: Hiraki, Takahiro, Okai, Koichi, Bartokos, Michael, Beeks, Kjeld, Fujimoto, Hiroyuki, Fukunaga, Yuta, Haba, Hiromitsu, Kasamatsu, Yoshitaka, Kitao, Shinji, Leitner, Adrian, Masuda, Takahiko, Guan, Ming, Nagasawa, Nobumoto, Ogake, Ryoichiro, Pimon, Martin, Pressler, Martin, Sasao, Noboru, Schaden, Fabian, Schumm, Thorsten, Seto, Makoto, Shigekawa, Yudai, Shimizu, Kotaro, Sikorsky, Tomas, Tamasaku, Kenji, Takatori, Sayuri, Watanabe, Tsukasa, Yamaguchi, Atsushi, Yoda, Yoshitaka, Yoshimi, Akihiro, Yoshimura, Koji
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The radioisotope thorium-229 ( Th) is renowned for its extraordinarily low-energy, long-lived nuclear first-excited state. This isomeric state can be excited by vacuum ultraviolet (VUV) lasers and Th has been proposed as a reference transition for ultra-precise nuclear clocks. To assess the feasibility and performance of the nuclear clock concept, time-controlled excitation and depopulation of the Th isomer are imperative. Here we report the population of the Th isomeric state through resonant X-ray pumping and detection of the radiative decay in a VUV transparent Th-doped CaF crystal. The decay half-life is measured to 447(25) s, with a transition wavelength of 148.18(42) nm and a radiative decay fraction consistent with unity. Furthermore, we report a new "X-ray quenching" effect which allows to de-populate the isomer on demand and effectively reduce the half-life. Such controlled quenching can be used to significantly speed up the interrogation cycle in future nuclear clock schemes.
ISSN:2041-1723