Spectroscopy of short-lived radioactive molecules: A sensitive laboratory for new physics
R.F. Garcia Ruiz, R. Berger, J. Billowes, C.L. Binnersley, M.L., Bissell, A.A. Breier, A.J. Brinson, K. Chrysalidis, T. Cocolios, B. Cooper,, K.T. Flanagan, T.F. Giesen, R.P. de Groote, S.Franchoo, F.P. Gustafsson, T.A., Isaev, A. Koszorus, G. Neyens, H.A. Perrett, C.M. Ricketts

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel experimental method to study short-lived radioactive molecules, specifically radium monofluoride, enabling high-precision investigations into fundamental physics and symmetry violations.
Contribution
It presents the first measurement of low-lying electronic states of RaF isotopologues using collinear resonance ionisation, demonstrating potential for laser cooling and advanced physics research.
Findings
First electronic state measurements of RaF isotopologues
Evidence supporting laser cooling schemes for RaF
Potential for new physics and symmetry violation studies
Abstract
The study of molecular systems provides exceptional opportunities for the exploration of the fundamental laws of nature and for the search for physics beyond the Standard Model of particle physics. Measurements of molecules composed of naturally occurring nuclei have provided the most stringent upper bounds to the electron electric dipole moment to date, and offer a route to investigate the violation of fundamental symmetries with unprecedented sensitivity. Radioactive molecules - where one or more of their atoms possesses a radioactive nucleus - can contain heavy and deformed nuclei, offering superior sensitivity for EDM measurements as well as for other symmetry-violating effects. Radium monofluoride, RaF, is of particular interest as it is predicted to have an appropriate electronic structure for direct laser cooling. Furthermore, some Ra isotopes are known to be octupole deformed,…
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