ISOLDE takes a solid tick forward towards a nuclear clock
Thursday 1 June 2023

image credit: CERN
Geneva, 24th May 2023. Atomic clocks are the world’s most precise timekeepers. Based on
periodic transitions between two electronic states of an atom, they can
track the passage of time with a precision as high as one part in a
quintillion, meaning that they won’t lose or gain a second over 30
billion years – more than twice the age of the Universe. In a
paper published today in Nature, an international team at CERN’s nuclear
physics facility, ISOLDE, reports a key step towards building a clock
that would be based on a periodic transition between two states of an
atomic nucleus – the nucleus of an isotope of the element thorium,
thorium-229. Such a nuclear clock could be more precise than
today’s most precise atomic clocks, thanks to the different size and
constituents of a nucleus compared to those of an atom. In addition, it
could serve as a sensitive tool with which to search for new phenomena
beyond the Standard Model, currently the best description there is of
the subatomic world. For instance, it could allow researchers to look
for variations over time of fundamental constants of nature and to
search for ultralight dark matter. Ever since 2003, when Ekkehard
Peik and Christian Tamm proposed a nuclear clock based on the transition
between the ground state of the thorium-229 nucleus and the first,
higher-energy state (called an isomer), researchers have been racing to
observe and characterise this nuclear transition. In the two
decades, researchers have measured with ever increasing precision the
isomer’s energy, the precise value of which is required to develop
lasers to drive the transition to the isomer. However, despite much
effort, they have not succeeded in observing the light emitted in the
transition from the isomer to the ground state. This phenomenon, known
in nuclear physicists’ parlance as the radiative decay of the isomer,
which has a relatively long lifetime, is a key ingredient in developing a
nuclear clock, because it would allow, among other things, the isomer’s
energy to be determined with higher precision. A team working at
ISOLDE has now achieved this feat by producing thorium-229 nuclei in the
isomeric state in a novel way and investigating the nuclei using a
technique called vacuum-ultraviolet spectroscopy. The wavelength of the
observed light corresponds to an isomer’s energy of 8.338 electronvolts
(eV) with an uncertainty of 0.024 eV – a value that is seven times more
precise than the previous most precise measurements. Significant
to the team’s success was the production of isomeric thorium-229 nuclei
via the so-called beta decay of actinium-229 isotopes, which were made
at ISOLDE and incorporated in calcium fluoride or magnesium fluoride
crystals. “ISOLDE is currently one of only two facilities in the
world that can produce actinium-229 isotopes,” says the main author of
the paper, Sandro Kraemer. “By incorporating these isotopes in calcium
fluoride or magnesium fluoride crystals, we produced many more isomeric
thorium-229 nuclei and increased our chances of observing their
radiative decay.” The novel approach of producing thorium-229
nuclei also made it possible to determine the lifetime of the isomer in
the magnesium fluoride crystal. Knowledge of this lifetime is needed to
predict the precision of a thorium-229 nuclear clock based on this
solid-state system. The long lifetime that was measured, namely 16.1
minutes with an uncertainty of 2.5 minutes, confirms theoretical
estimates and indicates that a clock precision competitive with that of
today’s most precise atomic clocks is attainable. “Solid-state
systems such as magnesium fluoride crystals are one of two possible
settings in which to build a future thorium-229 nuclear clock” says the
team’s spokesperson, Piet Van Duppen. “Our study marks a crucial step in
this direction, and it will facilitate the development of the lasers
needed to drive the periodic transition that would make such a clock
tick.” Video: https://videos.cern.ch/record/2297990
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