Precision spectroscopy of simple atomic systems has refined our understanding
of the fundamental laws of quantum physics. In particular, helium spectroscopy
has played a crucial role in describing two-electron interactions, determining
the fine-structure constant and extracting the size of the helium nucleus. Here
we present a measurement of the doubly-forbidden 1557-nanometer transition
connecting the two metastable states of helium (the lowest energy triplet state
2 3S1 and first excited singlet state 2 1S0), for which quantum electrodynamic
and nuclear size effects are very strong. This transition is fourteen orders of
magnitude weaker than the most predominantly measured transition in helium.
Ultracold, sub-microkelvin, fermionic 3He and bosonic 4He atoms are used to
obtain a precision of 8.10^{-12}, providing a stringent test of two-electron
quantum electrodynamic theory and of nuclear few-body theory.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figure