Frequency Domain Storage Ring Method for Electric Dipole Moment Measurement
Richard Talman

TL;DR
This paper proposes a frequency domain method using resonant polarimetry and rolling polarization to measure electric dipole moments of fundamental particles with unprecedented precision, testing physics beyond the standard model.
Contribution
It introduces a novel frequency domain approach with resonant polarimetry and rolling polarization to significantly improve EDM measurement accuracy.
Findings
Anticipated proton EDM precision of 10^{-30} e-cm.
Method reduces systematic errors from field imperfections.
Potential to test standard model predictions with high sensitivity.
Abstract
Precise measurement of the electric dipole moments (EDM) of fundamental charged particles would provide a significant probe of physics beyond the standard model. Any measurably large EDM would imply violation of both time reversal and parity conservation, with implications for the matter/anti-matter imbalance of the universe, not currently understood within the standard model. A frequency domain (i.e. difference of frequencies) method is proposed for measuring the EDM of electrons or protons or, with modifications, deuterons. Anticipated precision (i.e. reproducibility) is e-cm for the proton EDM, with comparable accuracy (i.e. including systematic error). This would be almost six orders of magnitude smaller than the present upper limit, and will provide a stringent test of the standard model. Resonant polarimetry, made practical by the large polarized beam charge, is the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsScientific Research and Discoveries · Computational Physics and Python Applications · Parallel Computing and Optimization Techniques
