Laser Cooling of Radium Ions
Abstract
The unstable radium nucleus is appealing for probing new physics due to its high mass, octupole deformation and energy level structure. Ion traps, with long hold times and low particle numbers, are excellent for work with radioactive species, such as radium and radium-based molecular ions, where low activity, and hence low total numbers, is desirable. We address the challenges associated with the lack of stable isotopes in a tabletop experiment with a low-activity ( 10 \ μCi) source where we laser-cool trapped radium ions. With a laser-cooled radium ion we measured the 7p\ 2P1/2o state's branching fractions to the ground state, 7s\ 2S1/2, and a metastable excited state, 6d\ 2D3/2, to be p=0.9104(7) and 0.0896(7), respectively. With a nearby tellurium reference line we measured the 7s\ 2S1/2 → 7p\ 2P1/2o transition frequency, 640.09663(6) THz.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.