Thorium Doped CsI: Implications for the Thorium Nuclear Clock Transition

ORAL

Abstract

For the 229mTh isomer nucleus, with an anomalously low excitation energy of E*$=$7.8 eV, the bound internal conversion (BIC) decay process is caused by the excitation of a valence electron that is sensitive to the electronic structure of the atomic-sized neighborhood. So to obtain the minimal nuclear excitation energy E*min necessary for BIC-promoting the s-wave valence electron, we analyze a recent experiment of a Th-impurity deposited in a CsI matrix. Depending on whether the Th-impurity is imparted into the bulk, or only a few atomic layers into the (111)-surface, we find that the E*min-value, which is the gap between the Th-s-band and the conduction band minimum (in the large unit cell limit) is equal to 1.4 and 1.7 eV respectively. This number can significantly reduce the lower E*-bound of 6.8 eV, that is the first ionization potential of an isolated Th-atom, as estimated from the recent direct observation of the Th-clock transition (von der Wense et al., Nature 533, 47-51, 2016). We suggest coating the multi-channel plate with materials of different Th-impurity gaps can further narrow the E* uncertainty interval.

Authors

  • E. R. Meyer

    Los Alamos National Laboratory

  • E. Timmermans

    Los Alamos National Laboratory

  • S. Rudin

    Los Alamos National Laboratory

  • J. D. Kress

    Los Alamos National Laboratory

  • L. A. Collins

    Los Alamos National Laboratory

  • X. Zhao

    Los Alamos National Laboratory