This record-breaking ultraviolet crystal could unlock nuclear clocks and change the way submarines, spacecraft and missiles navigate without external signals.


  • Nuclear clocks promise far greater precision than existing atomic timekeeping systems
  • Thorium-229 offers a rare path to practical nuclear time measurement
  • Ultraviolet breakthrough reduces one of toughest hurdles to nuclear clock development

A new crystal developed by Chinese scientists has broken the world record for converting ultraviolet light, bringing nuclear clock technology closer to reality.

The fluorinated borate compound pushes laser light to a wavelength of 145.2 nm, surpassing the previous benchmark of 150 nm set by a Chinese crystal from the 1990s.

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