ATOMIC AND MOLECULAR PHYSICS AT THE INTERFACE TO NUCLEAR AND PARTICLE PHYSICS

Research Programme, A-M Mårtensson-Pendrill

Introduction

Atomic physics is spectactular, not for the large scale of its facilities, but rather for the precision achievable and the importance of the information that can be obtained from experiments that are literally "tabletop".

A close collaboration between theory and experiment is a long-standing characteristic of the Göteborg atomic physics group, as emphasized already by the 1978 NFR evaluation of Swedish Atomic and Molecular Physics. The combination of theory and experiment has made atomic physics to a tool for extracting information e.g. about nuclear parameters and about fundamental interactions less well known than the Coulomb interaction, which dominates overwhelmingly in atoms. An example is the study of the parity non-conserving electroweak interaction, which I think is one of the most important parts of my work.

The tool of atomic physics is made even sharper, not only through the experimental developments, but also throguh the development of computers and through the development of methods to treat many-electron systems also for heavy elements, where relativistic effects play a very important role, and add formal and conceptual challenges to those of numerical and computational character. Our group has played a strong role in the development of methods to treat relativistic many-body problems. QED as the fundamental theory describing atomic systems, has been extremely successful. Modern experiments provide critical tests in new regions of nuclear charge, and thus keeps challenging the computationa and formal skills of theorists, demanding accurate treatment of many-body effects, as well as radiative corrections.

Throughout my career, I have been involved with calculations and developments of methods to assist interpretation of experimental results, usually in close collaboration with experimentalists in Göteborg or abroad. In other cases, my work has given the first quantative interpretation of experiments performed earlier, sometimes as early as in the 1950s. My work has strong connections, not only with experiments but also with nuclear and particle physics. The formal aspects of the work lead to good contacts also with quantum chemists. In 1994 I used these contacts to bring together researchers from these different areas in a workshop centered around the interpretation of experiments searching for violation of parity as well as time reversal symmetry in diatomic molecules. A brief report from this workshop is available.

I think that my most important work has been in connection with the study of parity non-conserving properties and I have written two reviews, which present the field and put some of my other work into context. The first review presents the studies of parity non-conservation without accompanying violation of time reversal symmetry (T). Here the task of matching the increasing experimental accuracy poses a severe challenge. By contrast, the search for T violation in atoms has given only upper limits. An atomic electric dipole moment could arise through several P and T violating mechanisms. The source of CP violation, so far observed only in the decay of neutral K mesons, remains obscure, and it is important to investigate as many possibilities as possible. The calculation of these properties faces fundamental problems connected to the relativistic formalism. The ability to perform very accurate calculations is based on earlier experience with non-relativistic calculations.

Parity Non-Conservation and Weak Interactions

The interest in atomic parity non-conservation stems from the possibility to obtain the weak-interaction parameters at low energies through combination of theoretical and experimental results. After a discouraging and confusing start, the experiments have now given results for several elements (Cs, Tl, Pb and Bi) which are in good agreement with theoretical predictions based on atomic calculations using the electron- nucleon interaction from the Standard Model for electroweak interactions. During 1978-81 I worked as a research associate in Seattle and Oxford in groups where atomic parity non-conserving effects are being studied. Since the PNC effects is strongly enhanced for heavy atoms it is essential to use a relativistic procedure and I thus developed a new set of computer programs. The need to treat two external perturbations (the weak interaction and the interaction with the electric dipole field from the photon) in addition to the Coulomb interaction between the electrons makes already the one-particle problem quite complicated. Single-particle effects have been included to all orders in a procedure similar to the Random-Phase Approximation or the Time-Dependent Hartree-Fock methods (but with a PNC operator in the one-electron Hamiltonian), giving results in relatively good agreement with experiments for Cs, Tl, Pb and Bi. Also lowest-order correlation effects have now been included using the relativistic pair program developed in our group. With a combined theoretical and experimental accuracy of around one percent these investigations would test the radiative corrections to the weak interactions which is an indirect probe of physics at a very high energy scale, normally probed only with extremely large accelerators. Recent experiments for Pb (Meekhof et al. Phys. Rev. Lett. 71 3442 1993) and Tl (?) (ICAP-14, Abstract 1D-3, and ?). has reached this accuracy. For Cs, where ,the theoretical value is most accurate, a significant improvement is expected to the 2% result by Noecker et al (Phys. Rev. Lett. 61 310-3 1988). This is the system where the theoretical accuracy is largest:. In 1990, several researchers calculating PNC effects met at a workshop on Coupled-Cluster Theory which resulted in a joint review paper (coordinated by our group) which discusses and compares the different approaches as well as the implications of the results for PNC in Cs. Future experimental developments are expected to lead to increased accuracy not only for Cs, but also for the other heavy atoms, such as, Tl, Pb and Bi. For the more complex atoms the interactions between the valence electrons, and also the core-valence interactions, are much larger than for the alkali atoms. To treat these systems, we plan a development of the coupled-cluster program in order to use more general potentials and wavefunctions as starting points. The study of PNC in several different atoms is important, since it leads to an independent confirmation of the results and thereby increases the reliability of the weak interaction parameters extracted from the atomic physics experiments. Another current line of PNC research is the study of sequences of isotopes of an element, such as Sm and Cs, in order to establish the neutron number dependence of the result. To interpret these data with sufficient accuracy, more detailed knowledge of the nuclear distributions is needed. The isotope shift measurements in the Cs chain will provide helpful information, in particular when combined with accurate theoretical isotope shift parameters, as discussed below.
Related Publications ,

Electric Dipole Moments (EDMs)

The presence of an EDM in an atom or elementary particle would imply a simultaneous violation of symmetry under parity (P) and time (T) reversal, and limits on EDMs can impose restrictions e.g. on supersymmetric gauge theories. Experimental results (Vold et al.Phys. Rev. Lett. 51 2229 1984, and Lamoureaux et al. Phys. Rev. Lett. 57 3125 1986, Jacobs et al. Phys. Rev. Lett. 71 3782 1993) have established very low upper limits for the electric dipole moment in Xe and Hg. The limit for Xe has been used to set an upper limit for a possible P and T violating electron-nucleon interaction and we have also performed a calculation relating an atomic EDM to a possible electron EDM in order to obtain limits for the electron EDM. For the closed shell ground state of Xe and Hg, the interaction with the nuclear magnetic moment is necessary to enable the electron EDM to cause an atomic EDM, thereby making the atomic EDM a few orders of magnitude smaller than the electronic one. The situation is quite different for the alkalis, where the atomic EDM are a few orders of magnitude larger than the electronic EDM. A number of groups are working to establish lower experimental limits for the the EDMs of one-valence systems the lowest limit today is derived from recent experiments on Cs and Tl and we have performed calculations also for these systems and are working on the inclusion of correlation effects . A possibly much more sensitive test may be provided by polar molecules and in 1994, I therefore organized an ESF workshop workshop in Oxford to bring together experimentalists, particle physicists and quantum chemists in discussing such possibilities.

Isotope Shifts

Isotope shifts are small energy differences between different isotopes of an element and arises from different sources: The normal mass shift (NMS) is due to the reduced mass of the electrons, the specific mass shift (SMS) is caused by a correlation of the electronic momenta due to the motion of the nucleus with its finite (non-infinite) mass, and the volume or field shift is due to the finite (non-zero) size of the nucleus. For a long time it was believed that meaningful ab initio calculations of the SMS were out of reach However, in 1981, I initiated and performed in collaboration with Sten Salomonson a calculation of all lowest order correlation contributions using the above- mentioned pair program. This gave a relatively satisfactory agreement with experiment, especially when "Brueckner orbitals", which include certain correlation effects directly in the orbitals, were used in the evaluation. This work marked a breakthrough and stimulated other groups to take up the challenge of the SMS. Similar calculations have now been performed also in the relativistic framework. However, higher-order correlation effects are not negligible and I am now developing a computer program for the evaluation of the SMS using relativistic coupled-cluster wavefunctions. We have also used many-body theory to evaluate also the electronic factor for the field isotope shift and found that higher-order contributions to this effect are significantly different from corresponding contributions to the contact hyperfine interaction. This leads to errors in the semi-empirical procedure commonly used to extract the electronic factor. In the light of these theoretical results we have reanalysed experimental data available for long chains of isotopes from experiments e.g. at CERN and GSI. In this way more reliable values for the changes d in the nuclear charge radii, of importance for nuclear physics, could be obtained.
Related publications. ,

Hyperfine Structure and Magnetic Moment Distributions

Hyperfine structure calculations often serve as a useful assessment of the accuracy of the atomic wavefunctions used to extract other properites, since it can usually be measured very accurately, and the nuclear magnetic moment can be determined independently. Recently, I extended these calculations to include also the effect of the distribution of the nuclear magnetic moment, known as "hyperfine anomaly" or the "Bohr-Weisskopf effect". The distribution of nuclear magnetization has been found to be important in recent investigations at GSI of hydrogen-like Bi, with the purpose of testing QED corrections (Klaft et al Phys. Rev. Lett. 73 2425, 1994). However, there are many older experimental results available for several different elements. In recent work, I was able to give a quantitative interpretation in terms of changes in the magnetic radius between 203Tl and 205Tl, based on experiments performed in the 1950s. This change was found to be significantly larger than the corresponding change in the charge radius. This difference may have implications for the interpretation of experiments searching for P and T violation. The results obtained should also provide a useful calibration for nuclear theory. In a recent project work, Martin Gustafsson examined in detail the effect of different charge distributions on the hyperfine structure, and implemented possibilities to use directly the results from scattering experiments studying nuclear charge distributions. The studies of the Bohr-Weisskopf effect will continue for other systems of experimental interest, e.g., in connection with experiments performed at ISOLDE for Cs isotopes.(Henry Stroke, Curt Ekström and others)

Related publications on hyperfine structure and on Magnetic moment distributions.

Pair Correlation

Pair correlation is essential for the studies of all properties discussed above. By means of iterative numerical solution of the "pair equation", pair correlatin can be treated to all orders within the "coupled-cluster approach". This was implemented in a non- relativistic program as part of my thesis work. The more recent calculations have focused on heavy atoms, where relativistic effects are essential. The ability to perform accurate calculations for heavy atoms has developed rapidly in recent years. Also relativistic pair correlation effects can now be treated within the coupled-cluster approach. Fundamental questions in connection with the relativistic electron-electron interaction are much better understood and methods have been developed to treat the Breit and Coulomb interactions together. The numerical accuracy is very good, as demonstrated e.g. in our recent paper studying the 1s2p states for helium-like systems. Here, the ability to handle a more general model space enabled us to obtain accurate results also for low Z, where earlier attempts to apply relativistic perturbation theory had failed. The high numerical accuracy is essential for critical comparisons of quantum-electrodynamic (QED) effects with experimental data. Accurate wavefunctions for heavy atoms also makes it possible to obtain quantitative results for other properties, as discussed above.

Related publications on Pair Correlation , Formal developments and calculations of various atomic properties .

Future developments

Formal developments are likely to include the incorporation of quantum electrodynamic (QED) effects in the coupled cluster approach. We expect that a combination of "multi- configuration" methods and perturbation theory will give accurate results also for more complex atoms and will pursue development in this direction. The powerful methods already developed in our group enable accurate calculations for different properties and systems. In the near future, we expect more applications to oscillator strengths in alkali atoms, where recent accurate experiments make possible a critical comparison. Negative ions show unusually large correlation effects, and are therefore of special theoretical interest. It is also one of the main directions of the experimental part of the group, and we foresee continued fruitful collaboration.
Research Programme, A-M Mårtensson-Pendrill
Ann-Marie.Pendrill@fy.chalmers.se
http://fy.chalmers.se/~f3aamp/research