High resolution spectroscopy of methyltrioxorhenium: towards the observation of parity violation in chiral molecules
Clara Stoeffler (LPL), Beno\^it Darqui\'e (LPL), Alexander, Shelkovnikov (LPL), Christophe Daussy (LPL), Anne Amy-Klein (LPL), Christian, Chardonnet (LPL), Laure Guy (LC), Jeanne Crassous, Th\'er\`ese Huet (PhLAM),, Pascale Soulard (LADIR), Pierre Asselin (LADIR)

TL;DR
This study conducts detailed high-resolution spectroscopy of methyltrioxorhenium to establish a foundation for observing parity violation in chiral molecules, combining multiple spectroscopic techniques and analyzing isotopologues.
Contribution
It provides comprehensive spectroscopic data on methyltrioxorhenium, validating the experimental approach for future parity violation measurements in chiral derivatives.
Findings
28 rotational lines assigned in 187Re MTO
71 rovibrational lines characterized, including hyperfine structure
First high-resolution jet-cooled spectra obtained
Abstract
Originating from the weak interaction, parity violation in chiral molecules has been considered as a possible origin of the biohomochirality. It was predicted in 1974 but has never been observed so far. Parity violation should lead to a very tiny frequency difference in the rovibrational spectra of the enantiomers of a chiral molecule. We have proposed to observe this predicted frequency difference using the two photon Ramsey fringes technique on a supersonic beam. Promising candidates for this experiment are chiral oxorhenium complexes, which present a large effect, can be synthesized in large quantity and enantiopure form, and can be seeded in a molecular beam. As a first step towards our objective, a detailed spectroscopic study of methyltrioxorhenium (MTO) has been undertaken. It is an ideal test molecule as the achiral parent molecule of chiral candidates for the parity violation…
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