Observation of the radiative decay of the ${}^{229}\mathrm{Th}$ nuclear clock isomer
Sandro Kraemer, Janni Moens, Michail Athanasakis-Kaklamanakis, Silvia, Bara, Kjeld Beeks, Premaditya Chhetri, Katerina Chrysalidis, Arno Claessens,, Thomas E. Cocolios, Jo\~ao M. Correia, Hilde De Witte, Rafael Ferrer, Sarina, Geldhof, Reinhard Heinke, Niyusha Hosseini

TL;DR
This paper reports the first direct observation of the radiative decay of the ${}^{229} ext{Th}$ nuclear isomer, providing precise energy and lifetime measurements crucial for developing nuclear optical clocks.
Contribution
The study successfully detected the radiative decay of the ${}^{229} ext{Th}$ isomer in crystal hosts, refining its energy and lifetime measurements, advancing nuclear clock development.
Findings
Photon wavelength of 148.71 nm measured
Isomer energy determined as 8.338 eV
Half-life in MgF₂ is 670 seconds
Abstract
The nucleus of the radioisotope thorium-229 (Th) features an isomer with an exceptionally low excitation energy that enables direct laser manipulation of nuclear states. For this reason, it is a leading candidate for use in next-generation optical clocks. This nuclear clock will be a unique tool, amongst others, for tests of fundamental physics. While first indirect experimental evidence for the existence of such an extraordinary nuclear state is significantly older, the proof of existence has been delivered only recently by observing the isomer's electron conversion decay and its hyperfine structure in a laser spectroscopy study, revealing information on the isomer's excitation energy, nuclear spin and electromagnetic moments. Further studies reported the electron conversion lifetime and refined the isomer's energy. In spite of recent progress, the isomer's radiative decay, a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Frequency and Time Standards · Radioactive Decay and Measurement Techniques · Scientific Measurement and Uncertainty Evaluation
