Relativistic atomic structure calculations in support of spectroscopy
L. F. Pa\v{s}teka, E. Eliav, M. L. Reitsma, A. Borschevsky

TL;DR
This paper reviews the relativistic coupled cluster method, especially the Fock-space variant, for high-accuracy atomic structure calculations supporting spectroscopy, crucial for heavy elements and fundamental physics tests.
Contribution
It provides a detailed overview of the relativistic coupled cluster approach and its FSCC variant, including computational procedures, uncertainty estimation, and recent applications in spectroscopy.
Findings
High-accuracy calculations for heavy atoms and molecules.
Systematic improvement and uncertainty assignment in theoretical predictions.
Successful application to atomic properties relevant to spectroscopy.
Abstract
Theory can provide important support at all the stages of spectroscopic experiments, from planning the measurements to the interpretation of the results. Such support is particularly valuable for the challenging experiments on heavy, unstable, and superheavy elements and for precision measurements aimed at testing the Standard Model of particle physics. To be reliable and useful in experimental context, theoretical predictions should be based on high-accuracy calculations. For heavy elements, such calculations must treat both relativistic effects and electron correlation on the highest possible level. Relativistic coupled cluster is considered one of the most powerful methods for accurate calculations on heavy many-electron atoms and molecules. This approach is highly accurate and versatile and can be used to obtain energies and a variety of atomic and molecular properties. Furthermore,…
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