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Atomic and Condensed Matter
Nuclear moments in molecular spectroscopy
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[QUOTE="Twigg, post: 6856259, member: 572426"] I would surprised if anyone's done this analysis, and if someone had, it still might not get published because there's little motivation for it. However, here's how I would start your literature search, if I were you: The closest thing I know of that people actually study in molecules is the nuclear magnetic quadrupole moment. Because I'm an experimentalist, I only know the experimentalists who work on this, namely the Hutzler group at Caltech. Someone had to do the theory calculations for the energy shift due to MQM in a molecule. I would find out who did those calculations (it may be cited in one of the Hutzler group's papers), and look up their other works. If nothing else, the MQM calculations may give you insight on how the nuclear quadrupole calculation would look like. Hope that helps. [/QUOTE]
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