Nuclear spin-dependent parity-violating effects in light polyatomic molecules
Yongliang Hao, Petr Navr\'atil, Eric B. Norrgard, Miroslav Ilia\v{s},, Ephraim Eliav, Rob G. E. Timmermans, Victor V. Flambaum, and Anastasia, Borschevsky

TL;DR
This paper discusses the potential of light triatomic molecules to measure nuclear spin-dependent parity-violating effects, which can test nuclear models, search for new particles, and distinguish contributions beyond the Standard Model.
Contribution
It provides high-accuracy calculations of NSD-PV effects and interaction parameters for light triatomic molecules, emphasizing the importance of many-body nuclear effects.
Findings
Nuclear structure calculations show significant deviations from single-particle models.
Relativistic coupled-cluster calculations yield precise molecular interaction parameters.
The work supports future experiments to detect NSD-PV effects in light molecules.
Abstract
Measurements of nuclear spin-dependent parity-violating (NSD-PV) effects provide an excellent opportunity to test nuclear models and to search for physics beyond the Standard Model. Molecules possess closely-spaced states with opposite parity which may be easily tuned to degeneracy to greatly enhance the observed parity-violating effects. A high-sensitivity measurement of NSD-PV effects using light triatomic molecules is in preparation [E. B. Norrgard, et al., Commun. Phys. 2, 77 (2019)]. Importantly, by comparing these measurements in light nuclei with prior and ongoing measurements in heavier systems, the contribution to NSD-PV from -boson exchange between the electrons and the nuclei may be separated from the contribution of the nuclear anapole moment. Furthermore, light triatomic molecules offer the possibility to search for new particles, such as the postulated …
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