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Research Van Swinderen Institute

Physics Colloquium, Peter Thirolf, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, Garching, Germany

When:Th 21-02-2019 16:00 - 17:00
Where:FSE-Building 5111.0080

Speaker: Peter Thirolf
Affiliation: Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, Garching, Germany
Title:

From the atomic clock towards the nuclear clock:

what do we know about the 229-Thorium isomer ?

Date: 21 February 2019
Start: 16:00 (Doors open and coffee available at 15:30)
Location: FSE-Building 5111.0080
Host: Julia Even / Thomas Schlatholter

Abstract:

Today’s most precise time and frequency measurements are performed with optical atomic clocks. However, it has been proposed that they could potentially be outperformed by a nuclear clock, which employs a nuclear transition instead of an atomic shell transition. There is only one known nuclear state that could serve as a nuclear clock using currently available technology, namely, the isomeric first excited state of 229Th.

Since 40 years nuclear physicists have targeted the identification and characterization of the elusive isomeric ground state transition of 229mTh. Evidence for its existence until recently could only be inferred from indirect measurements, suggesting an excitation energy of 7.8(5) eV. Thus the first excited state in 229Th represents the lowest nuclear excitation so far reported in the whole landscape of known isotopes.

Recently, the first direct detection of this nuclear state could be realized via its internal conversion decay branch, which confirms the isomer's existence and lays the foundation for precise studies of its decay parameters, in particular its half-life and excitation energy. Subsequently, a measurement of the halflife of the neutral isomer was achieved, confirming the expected reduction of 9 orders of magnitude compared to the one of charged 229mTh.

Most recently, collinear laser spectroscopy was applied to resolve the hyperfine structure of the thorium isomer, providing information on nuclear moments and the charge radius. Thus a considerable increase of insight into the properties of this elusive nuclear state could be achieved in the last three years, paving the way towards an all-optical control and thus the development of an ultra-precise nuclear frequency standard.

Moreover, a nuclear clock promises intriguing applications in applied as well as fundamental physics, ranging from geodesy and seismology to the investigation of possible time variations of fundamental constants.