Probing Multiple Electric Dipole Forbidden Optical Transitions in Highly Charged Nickel Ions
Shi-Yong Liang, Ting-Xian Zhang, Hua Guan, Qi-Feng Lu, Jun Xiao,, Shao-Long Chen, Yao Huang, Yong-Hui Zhang, Cheng-Bin Li, Ya-Ming Zou,, Ji-Guang Li, Zong-Chao Yan, Andrei Derevianko, Ming-Sheng Zhan, Ting-Yun Shi,, and Ke-Lin Gao

TL;DR
This paper explores multiple optical transitions in highly charged nickel ions for atomic clock applications, demonstrating experimental measurements, improved wavelength accuracy, and potential for fundamental physics tests with high stability.
Contribution
It identifies and measures multiple forbidden optical transitions in nickel HCIs, including first laboratory observations, with enhanced accuracy and potential for ultra-stable atomic clocks.
Findings
Measured wavelengths of six transitions with ppm accuracy
First laboratory observation of two optical lines in nickel HCIs
Projected fractional frequency uncertainty of 10^-19 for one transition
Abstract
Highly charged ions (HCIs) are promising candidates for the next generation of atomic clocks, owing to their tightly bound electron cloud, which significantly suppresses the common environmental disturbances to the quantum oscillator. Here we propose and pursue an experimental strategy that, while focusing on various HCIs of a single atomic element, keeps the number of candidate clock transitions as large as possible. Following this strategy, we identify four adjacent charge states of nickel HCIs that offer as many as six optical transitions. Experimentally, we demonstrated the essential capability of producing these ions in the low-energy compact Shanghai-Wuhan Electron Beam Ion Trap. We measured the wavelengths of four magnetic-dipole (1) and one electric-quadrupole (2) clock transitions with an accuracy of several ppm with a novel calibration method; two of these lines were…
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