The authors demonstrate the fabrication of 229ThF4 thin films using a miniaturized physical vapor deposition (PVD) process, consuming only micrograms of 229Th material. They observe the 229Th nuclear isomeric transition in these thin films through laser spectroscopy, with the measured lifetimes being significantly shorter than in previously studied 229Th-doped crystals.
The authors perform density functional theory (DFT) calculations on the monoclinic ThF4 crystal structure, which reveals two non-equivalent 229Th sites with distinct electric field gradients. This provides the opportunity to independently probe two separate populations of 229Th nuclei, potentially improving the performance of a 229ThF4-based nuclear clock.
The authors estimate the performance of a 229ThF4 nuclear clock, predicting a fractional instability of 5 × 10−17 at 1 second, comparable to state-of-the-art optical atomic clocks. The 229ThF4 thin films are also promising for studying Purcell effects and nuclear superradiance due to the high emitter density.
Overall, this work demonstrates a scalable solution to the challenges of material availability and radioactivity limits in solid-state nuclear clock development, paving the way for integrated and field-deployable nuclear clock devices.
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by Chuankun Zha... a las arxiv.org 10-03-2024
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