Order of magnitude smaller limit on the electric dipole moment of the electron

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Abstract

The Standard Model of particle physics is known to be incomplete. Extensions to the Standard Model, such as weak-scale supersymmetry, posit the existence of new particles and interactions that are asymmetric under time reversal (T) and nearly always predict a small yet potentially measurable electron electric dipole moment (EDM), de, in the range of 10 -27 to 10-30 e·cm. The EDM is an asymmetric charge distribution along the electron spin (S→) that is also asymmetric under T. Using the polar molecule thorium monoxide, we measured de = (-2.1 ± 3.7stat ± 2.5syst) x 10-29 e·cm. This corresponds to an upper limit of |d e| < 8.7 x 10-29 e·cm with 90%confidence, an order of magnitude improvement in sensitivity relative to the previous best limit. Our result constrains T-violating physics at the TeV energy scale.

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Baron, J., Campbell, W. C., DeMille, D., Doyle, J. M., Gabrielse, G., Gurevich, Y. V., … West, A. D. (2014). Order of magnitude smaller limit on the electric dipole moment of the electron. Science, 343(6168), 269–272. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1248213

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