Quantum Experiments International Collaboration CERN Data Analysis Plasma Physics Material Characterization Microscopy Data Collection Photonics Research Precision Spectroscopy Laboratory Methods X-ray Pulses Magnetic Field Experiments Detector Technology Photon Detection Electromagnetic Simulations Heavy-Ion Physics Optical Experiments Material Engineering MIT Research Nanoscale Research Ultra-high Vacuum Techniques Magneto-optical Effects Detection Methods Charge Exchange Charge Transfer Experiments Neutron Irradiation Effects Data Measurement Material Manipulation Phenomenological Models Quantum Metrology High Energy Physics Magnetization Dynamics Theoretical Physics Neutron Diffraction Fermilab Scanning Tunneling Microscopy Instrumentation Quantum Theory Collaboration Material Synthesis Plasma Instabilities High Field Science Magnetic Fields Astrophysics Gravitational Wave Astronomy Continuous Measurement Measurement Techniques Cryogenics Cryogenic Experiments Femtosecond Spectroscopy X-ray Lasers Innovative Methods Neutrino Experiments Numerical Simulations Quantum Measurement Brookhaven National Laboratory Radioactive Decay Atomic Nuclei Max Planck Institute Plasma Experiments Quantum Entanglement Quantum Emitters Photon Entanglement High-Energy Physics Network Integration Cell Behavior Laser Technology Nuclear Physics
A Nature Communications study validates a thorium-229 nuclear transition as an ultra-sensitive tool to test whether alpha changes over time.