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Characterization of Thorium-229 Crystal towards Vacuum Ultraviolet Search from Nuclear Clock isomer

ORAL

Abstract

Thorium-229 (229Th) is a nucleus that is excitable by laser light owing to its extremely low first excitation level of approximately 8 eV. It is expected to enable the realization of a nuclear clock using the unique nuclear transition of 229Th isomeric state. In particular, 'solid-state nuclear clocks' using 229Th-doped crystals enable the excitation of a large number of nuclei simultaneously and are expected to be applied in multiple fields such as fundamental physics and practical applications as stable clocks.

However direct excitation of 229Th from ground state has not been successfully achieved and the properties of the 229Th isomer in solids have not been experimentally clarified yet. Instead of attempting direct excitation to the 229Th isomer state, we excite 229Th by synchrotron X-ray irradiation to the second excited state with known transition properties and produce the isomeric state of 229Th through a de-excitation process.

In this talk, we would introduce our ongoing characterization experiments using X-ray absorption fine structure spectroscopy (XAFS) methods and the status of our experiments aimed at searching for de-excitation light of 229Th-doped target crystals by scanning with the irradiated X-ray energy at SPring-8, Japan.

Presenters

  • Sayuri Takatori

    Okayama University

Authors

  • Sayuri Takatori

    Okayama University

  • kjeld beeks

    EPFL, TU Wien

  • Hiroyuki Fujimoto

    AIST

  • Yuta Fukunaga

    Okayama University

  • Ming Guan

    Okayama University

  • Hiromitsu Haba

    RIKEN, RIKEN Nishina center, Nishina Center for Accelerator-Based Science, RIKEN

  • Takahiro Hiraki

    Okayama University

  • Yoshitaka Kasamatsu

    Osaka University

  • Shinji Kitao

    Kyoto University

  • Kenji Konashi

    Tohoku University

  • Takahiko Masuda

    Okayama University, Okayama Univ

  • Nobumoto Nagasawa

    JASRI

  • Ryoichiro Ogake

    Okayama University

  • Koichi Okai

    Okayama University, Okayama Univ

  • Noboru Sasao

    Okayama University

  • Fabian Schaden

    TU Wien

  • Thorsten Schumm

    TU Wien

  • Makoto Seto

    Kyoto University

  • Yudai Shigekawa

    RIKEN, RIKEN Nishina Center

  • Kotaro Shimizu

    Okayama University

  • Kenji Tamasaku

    RIKEN

  • Satoshi Uetake

    Okayama University

  • Makoto Watanabe

    Tohoku University

  • Tsukasa Watanabe

    AIST

  • Rei Yamamoto

    Okayama University

  • Atsushi Yamaguchi

    RIKEN

  • Yoshitaka Yoda

    JASRI

  • Akihiro Yoshimi

    Okayama University

  • Koji Yoshimura

    Okayama University

  • Motohiko Yoshimura

    Okayama University