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$^{229}\mathrm{ThF}_4$ thin films for solid-state nuclear clocks

Published 2 Oct 2024 in physics.atom-ph, nucl-ex, physics.optics, and quant-ph | (2410.01753v1)

Abstract: After nearly fifty years of searching, the vacuum ultraviolet ${229}$Th nuclear isomeric transition has recently been directly laser excited [1,2] and measured with high spectroscopic precision [3]. Nuclear clocks based on this transition are expected to be more robust [4,5] than and may outperform [6,7] current optical atomic clocks. They also promise sensitive tests for new physics beyond the standard model [5,8,9]. In light of these important advances and applications, a dramatic increase in the need for ${229}$Th spectroscopy targets in a variety of platforms is anticipated. However, the growth and handling of high-concentration ${229}$Th-doped crystals [5] used in previous measurements [1-3,10] are challenging due to the scarcity and radioactivity of the ${229}$Th material. Here, we demonstrate a potentially scalable solution to these problems by demonstrating laser excitation of the nuclear transition in ${229}$ThF$_4$ thin films grown with a physical vapor deposition process, consuming only micrograms of ${229}$Th material. The ${229}$ThF$_4$ thin films are intrinsically compatible with photonics platforms and nanofabrication tools for integration with laser sources and detectors, paving the way for an integrated and field-deployable solid-state nuclear clock with radioactivity up to three orders of magnitude smaller than typical \thor-doped crystals [1-3,10]. The high nuclear emitter density in ${229}$ThF$_4$ also potentially enables quantum optics studies in a new regime. Finally, we describe the operation and present the estimation of the performance of a nuclear clock based on a defect-free ThF$_4$ crystal.

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