Nonlinear calcium King plot constrains new bosons and nuclear properties
physics.atom-ph
/ Authors
A. Wilzewski, L. I. Huber, M. Door, J. Richter, A. Mariotti, L. J. Spieß, M. Wehrheim, S. Chen, S. A. King, P. Micke
and 32 more authors
M. Filzinger, M. R. Steinel, N. Huntemann, E. Benkler, P. O. Schmidt, J. Flannery, R. Matt, M. Stadler, R. Oswald, F. Schmid, D. Kienzler, J. Home, D. P. L. Aude Craik, S. Eliseev, P. Filianin, J. Herkenhoff, K. Kromer, K. Blaum, V. A. Yerokhin, I. A. Valuev, N. S. Oreshkina, C. Lyu, S. Banerjee, C. H. Keitel
/ Abstract
Nonlinearities in King plots (KP) of isotope shifts (IS) can reveal the existence of beyond-Standard-Model (BSM) interactions that couple electrons and neutrons. However, it is crucial to distinguish higher-order Standard Model (SM) effects from BSM physics. We measure the IS of the transitions ${{}^{3}P_{0}~\rightarrow~{}^{3}P_{1}}$ in $\mathrm{Ca}^{14+}$ and ${{}^{2}S_{1/2} \rightarrow {}^{2}D_{5/2}}$ in $\mathrm{Ca}^{+}$ with sub-Hz precision as well as the nuclear mass ratios with relative uncertainties below $4\times10^{-11}$ for the five stable, even isotopes of calcium (${}^{40,42,44,46,48}\mathrm{Ca}$). Combined, these measurements yield a calcium KP nonlinearity with a significance of $\sim 900 σ$. Precision calculations show that the nonlinearity cannot be fully accounted for by the expected largest higher-order SM effect, the second-order mass shift, and identify the little-studied nuclear polarization as the only remaining SM contribution that may be large enough to explain it. Despite the observed nonlinearity, we improve existing KP-based constraints on a hypothetical Yukawa interaction for most of the new boson masses between $10~\mathrm{eV/c^2}$ and $10^7~\mathrm{eV/c^2}$.