Direct Bound-Electron $g$ factor Difference Measurement with Coupled Ions
Tim Sailer (1), Vincent Debierre (1), Zolt\'an Harman (1), Fabian, Hei{\ss}e (1), Charlotte K\"onig (1), Jonathan Morgner (1), Bingsheng Tu (1),, Andrey V. Volotka (2,3), Christoph H. Keitel (1), Klaus Blaum (1), Sven, Sturm (1) ((1) Max-Planck-Institut f\"ur Kernphysik

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel dual-ion Penning trap technique to measure the difference in $g$ factors of isotopes with unprecedented precision, providing new tests of QED and constraints on dark matter interactions.
Contribution
The authors developed a co-trapping method for highly charged ions that significantly enhances measurement precision of isotope $g$ factor differences, surpassing previous techniques by over two orders of magnitude.
Findings
Measured isotopic $g$ factor shift with 0.56 ppt precision
Resolved QED nuclear recoil contribution for the first time
Set constraints on Higgs-portal dark matter interactions
Abstract
The quantum electrodynamic (QED) description of light-and-matter interaction is one of the most fundamental theories of physics and has been shown to be in excellent agreement with experimental results. Specifically, measurements of the electronic magnetic moment (or factor) of highly charged ions (HCI) in Penning traps can provide a stringent probe for QED, testing the Standard model in the strongest electromagnetic fields. When studying the difference of isotopes, even the intricate effects stemming from the nucleus can be resolved and tested as, due to the identical electron configuration, many common QED contributions do not have to be considered. Experimentally however, this becomes quickly limited, particularly by the precision of the ion masses or the achievable magnetic field stability. Here we report on a novel measurement technique that overcomes both of these limitations…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAtomic and Molecular Physics · Dark Matter and Cosmic Phenomena · Quantum and Classical Electrodynamics
