Publications by authors named "Krzysztof Pachucki"

We present a method for calculating the relativistic correction in hydrogen molecules that significantly exceeds the accuracy of all the previous literature results. This method utilizes the explicitly correlated nonadiabatic exponential wave function, and thus treats electrons and nuclei equivalently. The proposed method can be applied to any rovibrational state, including highly excited ones.

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We present a calculation of the hyperfine splitting of the 2^{3}S state in the ^{3}He atom with inclusion of all QED effects up to α^{3}E_{F}, where E_{F} is the Fermi splitting. Using the experimental value of the 1S hyperfine splitting in ^{3}He^{+}, we eliminate uncertainties from the nuclear structure and obtain the theoretical prediction for ^{3}He of ν_{hfs}=-6 739 701 181(41)  Hz, which is in perfect agreement with the experimental value -6 739 701 177(16)  Hz [S. D.

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We investigate the modification of the transverse electromagnetic interaction between two pointlike particles when one particle acquires a finite size. It is shown that the correct treatment of such interaction cannot be accomplished within the Breit approximation but should be addressed within the QED. The complete QED formula is derived for the finite-size nuclear recoil, exact in the coupling strength parameter Zα.

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The leading quantum electrodynamic corrections to the nuclear magnetic shielding in one- and two-electron atomic systems are obtained in a complete form, and the shielding constants of ^{1}H, ^{3}He^{+}, and ^{3}He are calculated to be 17.735 436(3)×10^{-6}, 35.507 434(9)×10^{-6}, and 59.

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We perform the four-body calculation of the hyperfine structure in the first rotational state J=1 of the H_{2}, D_{2}, and HD molecules and determine the accurate value for the deuteron electric quadrupole moment Q_{d}=0.285 699(15)(18)  fm^{2} in significant disagreement with former spectroscopic determinations. Our results for the hyperfine parameters agree very well with the currently most accurate molecular-beam magnetic resonance measurement performed several decades ago by N.

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The exchange energy, i.e., the splitting ΔE between gerade and ungerade states in the hydrogen molecule, has proven very difficult in numerical calculation at large internuclear distances R, while the known results are sparse and highly inaccurate.

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The first laser spectroscopic determination of the change in the nuclear charge radius for a five-electron system is reported. This is achieved by combining high-accuracy ab initio mass-shift calculations and a high-accuracy measurement of the isotope shift in the 2s^{2}2p  ^{2}P_{1/2}→2s^{2}3s  ^{2}S_{1/2} ground state transition in boron atoms. Accuracy is increased by orders of magnitude for the stable isotopes ^{10,11}B and the results are used to extract their difference in the mean-square charge radius ⟨r_{c}^{2}⟩^{11}-⟨r_{c}^{2}⟩^{10}=-0.

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Nonrelativistic energies of the deuterium molecule, accurate to 10-7-10-8 cm-1 for all levels located up to 8000 cm-1 above the ground state, are presented. The employed nonadiabatic James-Coolidge wave functions with angular factors enable the high accuracy to be reached regardless of vibrational or rotational quantum number. The derivative of the energy with respect to the deuteron-to-electron mass ratio is supplied for each level, which makes the results independent of the future changes in this physical parameter and will enable its determination from sufficiently accurate experimental data.

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The quantum electrodynamic correction to the energy of the hydrogen molecule has been evaluated without expansion in the electron-proton mass ratio. The obtained results significantly improve the accuracy of theoretical predictions reaching the level of 1 MHz for the dissociation energy, in very good agreement with the parallel measurement [Hölsch et al., Phys.

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Nonadiabatic exponential functions are employed to solve the four-body Schrödinger equation. Nonrelativistic bound energy levels of the HD molecule are calculated to the relative accuracy of 10-10, which is the first step toward highly accurate prediction of dissociation and transition energies. Such energies, in connection with equally accurate experimental data, will enable refinement of the physical constant and aid the search for deviations caused by yet unknown interactions at the atomic scale.

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The relativistic correction to the dissociation energy of H_{2}, D_{2}, and HD molecules has been accurately calculated without expansion in the small electron-nucleus mass ratio. The obtained results indicate the significance of nonadiabatic effects and resolve the discrepancy of theoretical predictions with recent experimental values for H_{2} and D_{2}. While the theoretical accuracy is now significantly improved and is higher than the experimental one, we observe about 3σ discrepancy for the dissociation energy of HD, which requires further investigation.

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The interaction between nuclear spins in a molecule is exceptionally sensitive to the physics beyond the standard model. However, all present calculations of the nuclear spin-spin coupling constant J are burdened by computational difficulties, which hinders the comparison to experimental results. Here, we present a variational approach and calculate the constant J in the hydrogen molecule with the controlled numerical precision, using the adiabatic approximation.

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We present a new computational method for the determination of energy levels in four-particle systems like H, HD, and HeH using explicitly correlated exponential basis functions and analytic integration formulas. In solving the Schrödinger equation, no adiabatic separation of the nuclear and electronic degrees of freedom is introduced. We provide formulas for the coupling between the rotational and electronic angular momenta, which enable calculations of arbitrary rotationally excited energy levels.

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We perform the calculation of all relativistic and quantum electrodynamic corrections of the order of α^{6} m to the ground electronic state of a hydrogen molecule and present improved results for the dissociation and the fundamental transition energies. These results open the window for the high-precision spectroscopy of H_{2} and related low-energy tests of fundamental interactions.

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The hydrogen molecule can be used for determination of physical constants, including the proton charge radius, and for improved tests of the hypothetical long range force between hadrons, which require a sufficiently accurate knowledge of the molecular levels. In this work, we perform the first step toward a significant improvement in theoretical predictions of H2 and solve the nonrelativistic Schrödinger equation to the unprecedented accuracy of 10(-12). We hope that it will inspire a parallel progress in the spectroscopy of the molecular hydrogen.

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Absolute transition frequencies of the 2s 2S{1/2}→2p2P{1/2,3/2} transitions in Be^{+} were measured for the isotopes ^{7,9-12}Be. The fine structure splitting of the 2p state and its isotope dependence are extracted and compared to results of ab initio calculations using explicitly correlated basis functions, including relativistic and quantum electrodynamics effects at the order of mα(6) and mα(7) ⁢ln α. Accuracy has been improved in both the theory and experiment by 2 orders of magnitude, and good agreement is observed.

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An efficient computational approach to nonadiabatic effects in the hydrogen molecule (H2, D2, and T2) is presented. The electronic wave function is expanded in the James-Coolidge basis set, which enables obtaining a very high accuracy of nonadiabatic potentials. A single point convergence of the potentials with growing size of the basis set reveals a relative accuracy ranging from 10(-8) to 10(-13).

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A new formalism for the accurate treatment of adiabatic effects in the hydrogen molecule is presented, in which the electronic wave function is expanded in the James-Coolidge basis functions. Systematic increase in the size of the basis set permits estimation of the accuracy. Numerical results for the adiabatic correction to the Born-Oppenheimer interaction energy reveal a relative precision of 10(-12) at an arbitrary internuclear distance.

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We consider quantum electrodynamics (QED) corrections to the fine splitting E(2P_{3/2})-E(2P_{1/2}) in the Li atom. We derive complete formulas for the mα^{6} and mα^{7}lnα contributions and calculate them numerically using highly optimized, explicitly correlated basis functions. The obtained results are in agreement with the most recent measurement, helping to resolve discrepancies between former ones and lay the foundation for the investigation of QED effects in light, many-electron atoms.

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Relativistic and QED corrections are calculated for a hyperfine splitting of the 2S1/2 ground state in 6,7Li atoms with a numerically exact account for electronic correlations. The resulting theoretical predictions achieve such a precision level that, by comparison with experimental values, they enable determination of the nuclear properties. In particular, the obtained results show that the 7Li nucleus, having a charge radius smaller than 6Li, has about a 40% larger Zemach radius.

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Dissociation energy (D(0)) of rovibrational levels of (4)HeH(+) has been predicted theoretically to the accuracy of the order of 0.01 cm(-1). The calculations take into account adiabatic and nonadiabatic corrections as well as relativistic and quantum electrodynamics effects.

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Eleven very weak electric quadrupole transitions Q(2), Q(1), S(0)-S(8) of the first overtone band of D(2) have been measured by very high sensitivity CW-cavity ring down spectroscopy (CRDS) between 5850 and 6720 cm(-1). The noise equivalent absorption of the recordings is on the order of α(min) ≈ 3 × 10(-11) cm(-1). By averaging a high number of spectra, the noise level was lowered to α(min) ≈ 4 × 10(-12) cm(-1) in order to detect the S(8) transition which is among the weakest transitions ever detected in laboratory experiments (line intensity on the order of 1.

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Five very weak transitions-O(2), O(3), O(4), O(5) and Q(5)-of the first overtone band of H(2) are measured by very high sensitivity CW-Cavity Ring Down Spectroscopy (CRDS) between 6900 and 7920 cm(-1). The noise equivalent absorption of the recordings is on the order of α(min)≈ 5 × 10(-11) cm(-1) allowing for the detection of the O(5) transition with an intensity of 1.1 × 10(-30) cm per molecule, the smallest intensity value measured so far for an H(2) absorption line.

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The dissociation energies from all rovibrational levels of H2 and D2 in the ground electronic state are calculated with high accuracy by including relativistic and quantum electrodynamics (QED) effects in the nonadiabatic treatment of the nuclear motion. For D2, the obtained energies have theoretical uncertainties of 0.001 cm(-1).

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The muonic hydrogen experiment measuring the 2P-2S transition energy [R. Pohl et al., Nature (London) 466, 213 (2010)] is significantly discrepant with theoretical predictions based on quantum electrodynamics.

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