Synopsis

Quantum Optics Moves into the Nucleus

Physics 4, s174
According to theoretical work, the tricks for controlling atoms with lasers should extend naturally into probing the nucleus.

Like atoms, nuclei have quantized energy states, which neutrons and protons fill according to the Pauli exclusion principle. Physicists have considered how laser techniques, similar to those used to study atoms, could directly probe the properties and transition frequencies of nuclei. However, exciting a nuclear transition would require an x-ray or gamma-ray laser with an intensity greater than 1020 Watts/cm 2.

Though they don’t operate at this extreme intensity, x-ray lasers, such as the new Linac Coherent Light Source at SLAC, and XFEL, a planned free-electron laser in Europe, are revitalizing the idea of nuclear quantum optics. In a paper appearing in Physical Review A, Ian Wong and his colleagues at Princeton University, New Jersey, demonstrate the theoretical feasibility of nuclear quantum state control, where an x-ray laser excites a nucleus from an arbitrary initial state to an arbitrary final state.

The probability of a laser-driven transition between two states has a complicated dependence on the temporal shape of the laser pulse. Experimentalists have been successful at using this dependence to optimize a laser pulse for exciting a particular atomic state. Wong and his colleagues investigate the “landscape” of transitions for nuclei and show mathematically that this optimization method should work in nuclear systems as well.

Isotopes in the lanthanide and actinide series of the periodic table, many of which have optically active transitions below 10,000 electron volts, are likely the best candidates for laser-driven nuclear studies. – Jessica Thomas


Subject Areas

OpticsNuclear Physics

Related Articles

Shedding Light on the Thorium-229 Nuclear Clock Isomer
Nuclear Physics

Shedding Light on the Thorium-229 Nuclear Clock Isomer

Researchers use a laser to excite and precisely measure a long-sought exotic nuclear state, paving the way for precise timekeeping and ultrasensitive quantum sensing. Read More »

Stiffening a Spring Made of Light
Optics

Stiffening a Spring Made of Light

Adding a nonlinear crystal to an optical spring can change the spring’s stiffness, a finding that could allow the use of such devices as gravitational-wave detectors. Read More »

Shielding Quantum Light in Space and Time
Quantum Physics

Shielding Quantum Light in Space and Time

A way to create single photons whose spatiotemporal shapes do not expand during propagation could limit information loss in future photonic quantum technologies. Read More »

More Articles