We study thorium-doped CaF2 crystals as a possible platform for optical
spectroscopy of the Th-229 nuclear isomer transition. We anticipate two major
sources of background signal that might cover the nuclear spectroscopy signal:
VUV-photoluminescence, caused by the probe light, and radioluminescence, caused
by the radioactive decay of Th-229 and its daughters. We find a rich
photoluminescence spectrum at wavelengths above 260 nm, and radioluminescence
emission above 220 nm. This is very promising, as fluorescence originating from
the isomer transition, predicted at a wavelength shorter than 200 nm, could be
filtered spectrally from the crystal luminescence. Furthermore, we investigate
the temperature-dependent decay time of the luminescence, as well as
thermoluminescence properties. Our findings allow for an immediate optimization
of spectroscopy protocols for both the initial search for the nuclear
transition using synchrotron radiation, as well as future optical clock
operation with narrow-linewidth lasers.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figure