Several new proton-proton parity violation experiments are presently either
being performed or are being prepared for execution in the near future.
Similarly, a new measurement of the parity-violating gamma-ray asymmetry in
polarized neutron capture on the proton is being developed with a ten-fold
improvement over previous measurements. These experiments are intended to
provide stringent constraints on the set of seven effective weak meson-nucleon
coupling constants. Time-reversal-invariance non-conservation has now been
unequivocally demonstrated in a direct measurement at CPLEAR. Tests may also be
made of time-reversal-invariance non-conservation in systems other than the
kaon system. There exist two classes of time-reversal invariance breaking
interactions: P-odd/T-odd and P-even/T-odd interactions. Constraints on the
first ones stem from measurements of the electric dipole moment of the neutron,
while constraints on the second ones stem from the same and measurements of
charge symmetry breaking in neutron-proton elastic scattering and from K
semi-leptonic decays. A series of precision experiments, either ongoing or
being prepared, will determine the neutral weak current of the proton by
measuring the parity-violating normalized asymmetry in electron-proton elastic
scattering. A direct comparison between the electromagnetic and neutral weak
ground state currents of the nucleon will allow a delineation of the
contributions to these currents of the various quark flavours, including quarks
which belong exclusively to the nucleon sea. An extension of these precision
experiments to very low momentum transfer would permit stringent limits to be
placed on physics beyond the standard model.Comment: 11 Pages LaTeX, including 5 PostScript figures. Uses esprc1.sty.
Invited Paper presented at 16th International Conference on Few-Body Problems
in Physics, Taipei, March 6-10, 200