Atomic-level-mixing contribution to the P,T-odd Faraday effect as an enhancement factor in the search for P,T-odd interactions in nature

S. D. Chekhovskoi, D. V. Chubukov, L. V. Skripnikov, A. N. Petrov, and L. N. Labzowsky
Phys. Rev. A 106, 052803 – Published 2 November 2022

Abstract

Recently, a P,T-odd Faraday effect (PTFE), optical rotation in an external electric field parallel to the light propagation direction, was discussed as a promising tool for observation of the electron electric dipole moment in the intracavity absorption spectroscopy with atoms or molecules. The main mechanism leading to this effect, the linear Stark splitting of atomic levels (PTFE, LS) is well known. This mechanism is similar to the Zeeman splitting mechanism in case of the ordinary Faraday effect, i.e., optical rotation in an external magnetic field. In this paper we analyze the other possible mechanisms of PTFE, in particular, the atomic-level-mixing mechanism (PTFE, LM). In our analysis we perform considering PTFE (as well as the ordinary FE) as a kind of electro- (magneto-) optical circular birefringence. For the ordinary FE the level-mixing mechanism (FE, LM) is known apart from the main Zeeman level splitting mechanism (FE, LS). However, (PTFE, LM) mechanism for the PTFE was never considered in literature. Usually, the (FE, LS) mechanism dominates and the same was expected for (PTFE, LS). We demonstrate, however, that with heavy diatomic molecules, in particular in PbF, the contribution of (PTFE, LM) may essentially exceed the (PTFE, LS). This promises an additional enhancement of P,T-odd effects in experiments with PbF molecule and makes this molecule one of the best candidates for performing such experiments.

  • Figure
  • Received 10 June 2021
  • Revised 11 April 2022
  • Accepted 16 September 2022

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevA.106.052803

©2022 American Physical Society

Physics Subject Headings (PhySH)

Atomic, Molecular & Optical

Authors & Affiliations

S. D. Chekhovskoi1, D. V. Chubukov1,2,3, L. V. Skripnikov1,2, A. N. Petrov1,2, and L. N. Labzowsky1,2

  • 1Department of Physics, St. Petersburg State University, 7/9 Universitetskaya Naberezhnaya, St. Petersburg 199034, Russia
  • 2Petersburg Nuclear Physics Institute named by B.P. Konstantinov of National Research Centre “Kurchatov Institut”, St. Petersburg, Gatchina 188300, Russia
  • 3Saint Petersburg State Electrotechnical University, street Professora Popova, St. Petersburg 197376, Russia

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Issue

Vol. 106, Iss. 5 — November 2022

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