The metastable first excited state of thorium-229, Th, is just a few electronvolts above the nuclear ground state and is accessible by vacuum ultraviolet lasers. The ability to manipulate the Th nuclear states with the precision of atomic laser spectroscopy opens up several prospects, from studies of fundamental interactions in physics to applications such as a compact and robust nuclear clock. However, direct optical excitation of the isomer and its radiative decay to the ground state have not yet been observed, and several key nuclear structure parameters-such as the exact energies and half-lives of the low-lying nuclear levels of Th-remain unknown. Here we present active optical pumping into Th, achieved using narrow-band 29-kiloelectronvolt synchrotron radiation to resonantly excite the second excited state of Th, which then decays predominantly into the isomer. We determine the resonance energy with an accuracy of 0.07 electronvolts, measure a half-life of 82.2 picoseconds and an excitation linewidth of 1.70 nanoelectronvolts, and extract the branching ratio of the second excited state into the ground and isomeric state. These measurements allow us to constrain the Th isomer energy by combining them with γ-spectroscopy data collected over the past 40 years.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41586-019-1542-3 | DOI Listing |
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