Kraemer S, Moens J, Athanasakis-Kaklamanakis M, Bara S, Beeks K, Chhetri P, Chrysalidis K, Claessens A, Cocolios TE, Correia JGM, Witte H, Ferrer R, Geldhof S, Heinke R, Hosseini N, Huyse M, Köster U, Kudryavtsev Y, Laatiaoui M, Lica R, Magchiels G, Manea V, Merckling C, Pereira LMC, Raeder S, Schumm T, Sels S, Thirolf PG, Tunhuma SM, Van Den Bergh P, Van Duppen P, Vantomme A, Verlinde M, Villarreal R, and Wahl U
The radionuclide thorium-229 features an isomer with an exceptionally low excitation energy that enables direct laser manipulation of nuclear states. It constitutes one of the leading candidates for use in next-generation optical clocks 1-3 . This nuclear clock will be a unique tool for precise tests of fundamental physics 4-9 . Whereas indirect experimental evidence for the existence of such an extraordinary nuclear state is substantially older 10 , the proof of existence has been delivered only recently by observing the isomer's electron conversion decay 11 . The isomer's excitation energy, nuclear spin and electromagnetic moments, the electron conversion lifetime and a refined energy of the isomer have been measured 12-16 . In spite of recent progress, the isomer's radiative decay, a key ingredient for the development of a nuclear clock, remained unobserved. Here, we report the detection of the radiative decay of this low-energy isomer in thorium-229 ( 229m Th). By performing vacuum-ultraviolet spectroscopy of 229m Th incorporated into large-bandgap CaF 2 and MgF 2 crystals at the ISOLDE facility at CERN, photons of 8.338(24) eV are measured, in agreement with recent measurements 14-16 and the uncertainty is decreased by a factor of seven. The half-life of 229m Th embedded in MgF 2 is determined to be 670(102) s. The observation of the radiative decay in a large-bandgap crystal has important consequences for the design of a future nuclear clock and the improved uncertainty of the energy eases the search for direct laser excitation of the atomic nucleus., (© 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited.)