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Topic Name: Turn on and off the decay of a nuclear isomer
Category: Nuclear
Research persons: Bret Beck,Peter Beiersdorfer,John Becker, Greg Brown and Ken Moody
Location: Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory,7000 East Avenue • Livermore, CA 94550, United States
Details
Livermore
researchers have moved one step closer to being able to turn on and off the
decay of a nuclear isomer.The protons and neutrons in a nucleus can be arranged
in many ways. The arrangement with the lowest energy is called the ground state
and all others are called excited states. (This is analogous to the ground and
excited states of electrons in an atom except that nuclear excited states are
typically thousands of times higher in energy.) Excited nuclear states
eventually decay to the ground state via gamma emission or to another nucleus
via particle emission. Most excited states are short-lived (e.g., billionth of a
second). However, a few are long-lived (e.g., hours) and are called
isomers.Turning the decay on and off is key to using isiomers as high-energy
density storage systems such as batteries.
Researchers at Livermore studied an isomer of Thorium-229. This isomer is unique
in that its excitation energy is near optical energies, implying that one day
scientists may be able to transition Th229 nuclei between the ground and
isomeric states using a table-top laser.
“This would then be the first time human control would be exerted over nuclear
levels,” said Peter Beiersdorfer, an LLNL physicist and co-author of a paper
that appears in the April 6 issue of Physical Review Letters. “This
only works if the laser is tuned to exactly the correct energy.”
For years, researchers have been fascinated with this isomer because it could
lead to new science and technology breakthroughs. Among them are: a quantum
many-body study; a clock with unparallel precision for general relativity tests;
a superb qubit (a quantum bit) for quantum computing; testing the effects of the
chemical environment on nuclear decay rates. Isomers also may serve as a battery
for storing large amounts of energy.
However, before
these exotic studies can be performed, an accurate determination of the isomer’s
excitation energy above the ground state is needed. In the most recent research,
Livermore scientists, along with colleagues from Los Alamos National Laboratory
and NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, have made the most accurate measurement of
this energy difference using an indirect technique.
Our measurement is more accurate and differs significantly from prior results.
This may explain why scientists have failed to directly see this transition.
Frankly, they were looking in the wrong place,” said Bret Beck, an LLNL
physicist and lead-author on the paper.
The next step will be to use a laser or a synchrotron tuned to the exact energy
of the spacing between the two levels and observe the transition from the ground
state to the isomeric state.
Once laser excitation has proven possible, helping an excited level decay (and
thus give off energy) can be tackled. “But for building a more precise clock
than we have today, or building a quantum computer, excitation may be all that’s
needed,” Beiersdofer said.
Other Livermore scientists involved in the work include John Becker, Greg Brown
and Ken Moody.
Founded in 1952, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory has a mission to ensure
national security and to apply science and technology to the important issues of
our time. Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory is managed by the
University of California for the U.S. Department of Energy’s National Nuclear
Security Administration.
Laboratory news releases and photos are also available at
http://www.llnl.gov/pao and on UC Newswire
About Researchers:
Bret is in
charge of the LLNL nuclear (neutron, charged particles, and gamma)
deterministic transport processed data files and access routines, a package
called LIBNDF.A.
beck6@llnl.gov
bbeck@llnl.gov
phone: 925-423-6148
fax: 925-422-9560
Peter Beiersdorfer
mailcode: L-260
phone:
925-423-3985
fax:
925-423-2302
email:
beiersdorfer1@llnl.gov
affiliation:
LLNL Physics - V Division
Funded:
University of California
for the
U.S. Department of Energy’s National Nuclear Security Administration.
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