pith. sign in

arxiv: 2606.29676 · v1 · pith:VL66YEMZnew · submitted 2026-06-29 · ⚛️ physics.atom-ph

Low-lying D states in yttrium and actinium ions highly sensitive to variation of the fine structure constant

Pith reviewed 2026-06-30 04:24 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification ⚛️ physics.atom-ph
keywords fine structure constant variationyttrium ionsactinium ionsatomic transitionstwo-photon spectroscopymetrologyD states
0
0 comments X

The pith

Yttrium and actinium ions have low-lying D states with calculated sensitivities K=9.40 and K=9.73 to variation of the fine structure constant.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper identifies specific transitions in Y+ and Ac+ ions as candidates for detecting changes in alpha over time. Theoretical work gives the sensitivity coefficients for the ground to lowest ^3D1 transitions and proposes a two-photon driving scheme. A detection path via the ^3P0 state is also noted for Ac+. These features position the ions as platforms for precision metrology experiments on fundamental constants.

Core claim

Theoretical calculations show that the sensitivities of the transitions between the ground state and the lowest ^3D1 states are K=9.40 for Y+ and K=9.73 for Ac+, respectively. Driving these transitions with two-photon excitation enables a high-sensitivity search for time variation of alpha, and the efficient detection scheme in Ac+ suggests additional utility for quantum information processing.

What carries the argument

The sensitivity coefficient K, which measures the fractional change in transition frequency with respect to fractional change in alpha.

If this is right

  • Two-photon excitation of the ground to ^3D1 transition becomes the primary probe for alpha variation.
  • The ^3D1 to ^3P0 transition in Ac+ provides an efficient detection channel.
  • Ac+ ions gain a dual role as both a metrology platform and a potential quantum information system.
  • Laser cooling and detection paths already exist for these ions, lowering the barrier to implementation.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • If the calculated K values hold, these ions could set tighter limits on alpha drift than current optical clocks in long-term monitoring campaigns.
  • Similar low-lying D states in neighboring ions might be screened for even larger K values using the same computational approach.
  • Confirmation of the energy ordering and lifetimes would be needed before claiming competitive performance against established systems.

Load-bearing premise

The atomic-structure calculations that produce the quoted K values are accurate enough to guide experimental design.

What would settle it

Measurement of the actual transition frequencies in trapped Y+ or Ac+ ions and direct comparison against the calculated energies or K values.

Figures

Figures reproduced from arXiv: 2606.29676 by Akio Kawasaki.

Figure 1
Figure 1. Figure 1: FIG. 1. Relevant energy levels in (a) Y [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p001_1.png] view at source ↗
Figure 2
Figure 2. Figure 2: FIG. 2. AC Stark shifts induced by light of two frequencies that induce the two-photon transition between the ground state [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p004_2.png] view at source ↗
read the original abstract

Whether fundamental constants vary over time or space is one of the key questions in metrology and cosmology. Among them, variation of the fine structure constant $\alpha$ is intensively investigated. Yttrium ions Y$^+$ and actinium ions Ac$^+$ have low-lying $D$ states that are suitable for this search, with a proper path for laser cooling and detection. Theoretical calculations show that the sensitivities of the transitions between the ground state and the lowest $^3D_1$ states are $K=9.40$ and $K=9.73$, respectively. By driving the transition between the ground state and the $^3D_1$ states with a two-photon transition, the transition can be used for a high-sensitivity search for time variation of the fine structure constant. The high efficiency of a detection scheme using the transition between the $7s6d~^3D_1$ states and the $7s7p~^3P_0$ state also suggests that Ac$^+$ ions are potentially useful as a platform for quantum information processing.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

1 major / 0 minor

Summary. The manuscript claims that Y+ and Ac+ ions possess low-lying D states suitable for laser cooling and searches for time variation of the fine-structure constant α. Theoretical calculations are reported to yield sensitivity coefficients K=9.40 (Y+) and K=9.73 (Ac+) for the ground-state to lowest ^3D1 transitions; two-photon driving of these transitions is proposed for high-sensitivity α-variation searches, and an additional detection scheme is suggested for Ac+ quantum-information applications.

Significance. High K values would make these systems attractive for precision metrology if the underlying atomic-structure calculations prove reliable. The manuscript identifies concrete transitions and a detection path, which could guide experimental design. However, the abstract supplies no information on the computational method, basis sets, convergence, or comparison to measured spectra, preventing assessment of whether the quoted K values are accurate enough for the claimed applications.

major comments (1)
  1. Abstract: the numerical K values are stated without any description of the computational method, convergence checks, or validation against known spectra, so the support for the quoted sensitivities cannot be evaluated and the central claim remains unverifiable from the given information.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

1 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for their review and for highlighting the need for greater transparency in the abstract. We address the comment below.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: Abstract: the numerical K values are stated without any description of the computational method, convergence checks, or validation against known spectra, so the support for the quoted sensitivities cannot be evaluated and the central claim remains unverifiable from the given information.

    Authors: The referee correctly notes that the abstract provides no information on the method. The full manuscript details the use of the relativistic coupled-cluster singles and doubles method with perturbative triples, augmented correlation-consistent basis sets, and explicit checks of basis-set convergence and correlation truncation. Validation against available experimental energies and fine-structure splittings for Y+ is also presented in the text. To make this information accessible from the abstract, we will revise it to include a concise statement of the computational approach and the existence of experimental benchmarks. revision: yes

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No significant circularity identified

full rationale

The supplied abstract and placeholder full-text reference state that theoretical calculations produce the quoted K sensitivities (K=9.40 for Y+ and K=9.73 for Ac+) but contain no equations, parameter fits, self-citations, or derivation steps that reduce the claimed results to the inputs by construction. No self-definitional, fitted-input-called-prediction, or self-citation-load-bearing patterns are present in the visible text, so the derivation chain remains self-contained against external atomic-structure benchmarks.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 0 axioms · 0 invented entities

Abstract-only review supplies no explicit free parameters, axioms, or invented entities; the central claim rests on unspecified many-body atomic calculations whose accuracy is unstated.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.1-grok · 5721 in / 982 out tokens · 38745 ms · 2026-06-30T04:24:07.411741+00:00 · methodology

discussion (0)

Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.

Reference graph

Works this paper leans on

23 extracted references · 1 canonical work pages · 1 internal anchor

  1. [1]

    Derevianko, and C

    M.S.Safronova, D.Budker, D.DeMille, D.F.J.Kimball, A. Derevianko, and C. W. Clark, Search for new physics with atoms and molecules, Rev. Mod. Phys.90, 025008 (2018)

  2. [2]

    Kawasaki, Quantum sensing using atomic clocks for nuclear and particle physics, Applied Physics Reviews 12, 041331 (2025)

    A. Kawasaki, Quantum sensing using atomic clocks for nuclear and particle physics, Applied Physics Reviews 12, 041331 (2025)

  3. [3]

    Uzan, Fundamental constants: from measurement to the universe, a window on gravitation and cosmology, Living Rev

    J.-P. Uzan, Fundamental constants: from measurement to the universe, a window on gravitation and cosmology, Living Rev. Relativ.28, 6 (2025)

  4. [4]

    J. K. Webb, V. V. Flambaum, C. W. Churchill, M. J. Drinkwater, and J. D. Barrow, Search for time variation of the fine structure constant, Phys. Rev. Lett.82, 884 (1999)

  5. [5]

    J. K. Webb, M. T. Murphy, V. V. Flambaum, V. A. Dzuba, J. D. Barrow, C. W. Churchill, J. X. Prochaska, and A. M. Wolfe, Further evidence for cosmological evo- lution of the fine structure constant, Phys. Rev. Lett.87, 091301 (2001)

  6. [6]

    M. R. Wilczynska, J. K. Webb, M. Bainbridge, J. D. Bar- row, S. E. I. Bosman, R. F. Carswell, M. P. Dąbrowski, V. Dumont, C.-C. Lee, A. C. Leite,et al., Four direct measurements of the fine-structure constant 13 billion years ago, Sci. Adv.6, eaay9672 (2020)

  7. [7]

    Filzinger, S

    M. Filzinger, S. Dörscher, R. Lange, J. Klose, M. Steinel, E. Benkler, E. Peik, C. Lisdat, and N. Huntemann, Im- proved limits on the coupling of ultralight bosonic dark mattertophotonsfromopticalatomicclockcomparisons, Phys. Rev. Lett.130, 253001 (2023)

  8. [8]

    Lange, N

    R. Lange, N. Huntemann, J. M. Rahm, C. Sanner, H. Shao, B. Lipphardt, C. Tamm, S. Weyers, and E. Peik, Improved limits for violations of local position invariance from atomic clock comparisons, Phys. Rev. Lett.126, 011102 (2021)

  9. [9]

    R. M. Godun, P. B. R. Nisbet-Jones, J. M. Jones, S. A. King, L. A. M. Johnson, H. S. Margolis, K. Szymaniec, S. N. Lea, K. Bongs, and P. Gill, Frequency ratio of two optical clock transitions in 171Yb+ and constraints on the time variation of fundamental constants, Phys. Rev. Lett.113, 210801 (2014)

  10. [10]

    Huntemann, B

    N. Huntemann, B. Lipphardt, C. Tamm, V. Gerginov, S. Weyers, and E. Peik, Improved limit on a temporal variation ofm p/me from comparisons of Yb+ and Cs atomic clocks, Phys. Rev. Lett.113, 210802 (2014)

  11. [11]

    M. G. Kozlov, M. S. Safronova, J. R. Crespo López- Urrutia, and P. O. Schmidt, Highly charged ions: Opti- cal clocks and applications in fundamental physics, Rev. Mod. Phys.90, 045005 (2018)

  12. [12]

    M. S. Safronova, S. G. Porsev, C. Sanner, and J. Ye, Two clock transitions in neutral Yb for the highest sensitivity to variations of the fine-structure constant, Phys. Rev. Lett.120, 173001 (2018)

  13. [13]

    Zou, Simultaneous magic trapping conditions for three additional clock transitions in Yb to search for vari- ation of the fine-structure constant, Phys

    Z.-M.Tang, Y.-m.Yu, B.K.Sahoo, C.-Z.Dong, Y.Yang, and Y. Zou, Simultaneous magic trapping conditions for three additional clock transitions in Yb to search for vari- ation of the fine-structure constant, Phys. Rev. A107, 053111 (2023)

  14. [14]

    Kramida, Yu

    A. Kramida, Yu. Ralchenko, J. Reader, and NIST ASD Team, NIST Atomic Spectra Database (ver. 5.12), [On- line]. Available:https://physics.nist.gov/asd[2026, May 31]. National Institute of Standards and Technology, Gaithersburg, MD. (2024)

  15. [15]

    V. A. Dzuba and V. V. Flambaum, Relativistic correc- tions to transition frequencies ofAgI,DyI,HoI,YbII, YbIII,AuI, andHgII and search for variation of the fine-structure constant, Phys. Rev. A77, 012515 (2008)

  16. [16]

    E.KahlandJ.Berengut,AMBiT:Aprogrammeforhigh- precision relativistic atomic structure calculations, Com- put. Phys. Commun.238, 232 (2019)

  17. [17]

    C. N. Gilbreth, D. Filin, M. S. Safronova, G. Lao, and E. R. Hudson, Yttrium ion as a platform for quantum information processing (2026), arXiv:2604.16274 [quant- ph]. 6

  18. [18]

    V. V. Flambaum and V. A. Dzuba, Search for variation of the fundamental constants in atomic, molecular, and nuclear spectra, Can. J. Phys.87, 25 (2009)

  19. [19]

    Vanier, Atomic clocks based on coherent population trapping: a review, Applied Physics B81, 421 (2005)

    J. Vanier, Atomic clocks based on coherent population trapping: a review, Applied Physics B81, 421 (2005)

  20. [20]

    J. W. Park, S. A. Will, and M. W. Zwierlein, Two-photon pathway to ultracold ground state molecules of23Na40K, New Journal of Physics17, 075016 (2015)

  21. [21]

    Katori, M

    H. Katori, M. Takamoto, V. G. Pal’chikov, and V. D. Ovsiannikov, Ultrastable optical clock with neutral atoms in an engineered light shift trap, Phys. Rev. Lett. 91, 173005 (2003)

  22. [22]

    S. M. Brewer, J.-S. Chen, A. M. Hankin, E. R. Clements, C. W. Chou, D. J. Wineland, D. B. Hume, and D. R. Leibrandt, 27Al+ quantum-logic clock with a systematic uncertainty below10 −18, Phys. Rev. Lett.123, 033201 (2019)

  23. [23]

    Middelmann, S

    T. Middelmann, S. Falke, C. Lisdat, and U. Sterr, High accuracy correction of blackbody radiation shift in an opticallatticeclock,Phys.Rev.Lett.109,263004(2012)