Energy of the 229Th nuclear clock transition

Abstract

The first nuclear excited state of 229Th offers the unique opportunity for laser-based optical control of a nucleus. Its exceptional properties allow for the development of a nuclear optical clock which offers a complementary technology and is expected to outperform current electronic-shell based atomic clocks. The development of a nuclear clock was so far impeded by an imprecise knowledge of the energy of the 229Th nuclear excited state. In this letter we report a direct excitation energy measurement of this elusive state and constrain this to 8.280.17 eV. The energy is determined by spectroscopy of the internal conversion electrons emitted in-flight during the decay of the excited nucleus in neutral 229Th atoms. The nuclear excitation energy is measured via the valence electronic shell, thereby merging the fields of nuclear- and atomic physics to advance precision metrology. The transition energy between ground and excited state corresponds to a wavelength of 149.73.1 nm. These findings set the starting point for high-resolution nuclear laser spectroscopy and thus the development of a nuclear optical clock of unprecedented accuracy. A nuclear clock is expected to have a large variety of applications, ranging from relativistic geodesy over dark matter research to the observation of potential temporal variation of fundamental constants.

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