Toward measurement of Nuclear Spin-Dependent(NSD) Parity Non-Conserving (PNC) interaction in <sup>133</sup>Cs hyperfine ground states via two-pathway coherent control Jungu Choi 10.25394/PGS.8319686.v1 https://hammer.purdue.edu/articles/thesis/Toward_measurement_of_Nuclear_Spin-Dependent_NSD_Parity_Non-Conserving_PNC_interaction_in_sup_133_sup_Cs_hyperfine_ground_states_via_two-pathway_coherent_control/8319686 Weak interactions in an atomic system by external electromagnetic fields or nucleon-nucleon interaction cause perturbations in the wave-function and energy levels of electrons, which allow for transitions that are otherwise forbidden. Of particular interest are magnetic dipole (M1) transitions, Stark-induced transitions, and parity non-conserving (PNC) transitions. The PNC interaction in the hyperfine ground states is dominantly due to the anapole moment of the nucleus and there has been up-to-date only one such measurement carried out in any system; the Boulder group's ground-breaking measurement of the anapole moment in atomic cesium in 1997. Their result derived from two different hyperfine transitions, however, did not agree with the meson-coupling model from high energy physics experiments. Therefore, it is important to revisit the anapole moment through another method to cross-check the Boulder group's measurement. Our goal is to excite the nuclear-spin-dependent (NSD) PNC ground hyperfine transitions in cesium via radio-frequency (rf) and Raman excitation to directly determine the anapole moment. I present our progress toward measurement of the NSD transition in an atomic Cs beam geometry. We have developed a broadband rf cavity resonator to strongly suppress the magnetic dipole (M1) transition while enhancing the forbidden PNC electric dipole (E1) transition. We employed an injection locking scheme to generate a pair of phase-coherent Raman lasers far detuned from the cesium D2 line (852 nm) with a 9.2 GHz frequency difference. I report various measurement data from atomic signal via rf and Raman excitation. In the next generation of measurements, we will carry out interference experiments between rf and Raman transitions by varying the phase relations of the rf and Raman lasers fields. Finally, based on the measurements, I discuss a novel robust measurement technique involving interference of the Raman, M1 and E<sub>PNC</sub> contributions.<br> 2019-08-13 16:58:20 Atomic Physics atomic parity violation laser spectroscopy experiments radio-frequency field Electrical and Electronic Engineering not elsewhere classified