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Neutrons could test Newton's gravity and string theory

2011-04-18 11:30:34

A pioneering technique using subatomic particles known as neutrons could give

microscopic hints of extra dimensions or even dark matter, researchers say.

The idea rests on probing any minuscule variations in gravity as it acts on

slow-moving neutrons in a tiny cavity.

A Nature Physics report outlines how neutrons were made to hop from one

gravitational quantum state to another.

These quantum jumps can test Newton's theory of gravity - and any variations

from it - with unprecedented precision.

The "quantum states" of atoms, light particles known as photons, molecules and

even objects big enough to be seen have been extensively studied.

They are called quantum because it takes a packet of energy of a very specific

size - a quantum - to create the states.

However, of the four fundamental forces, gravity is by far the weakest, and it

took until 2002 before gravity's quantum nature was proven.

That work, by a group of researchers at the Institut Laue-Langevin (ILL) and

published in a paper in Nature, used slow-moving neutrons falling due to

gravity.

The neutrons are created in a fission reactor, and slowed to incredibly low

speeds by materials known as moderators.

They are gathered up and injected into the quantum experiment at speeds of

around five meters per second - just a hundredth the speed of the molecules

flying around in the air.

What is useful about neutrons for these experiments is that they are

electrically neutral - within the experiment, they are as isolated from all the

forces of nature as they can possibly be, with only gravity to act on them.

The neutrons are shot between two parallel plates, one above another and

separated by about 25 micrometres - half a hair's width. The upper plate

absorbs neutrons, and the lower plate reflects them.

As they pass through, they trace out an arc, just like a thrown ball falling

due to gravity. If they hit the bottom surface before passing through, they are

reflected off and absorbed at the top - and thus are not detected at the other

end of the plates.

The new work by the ILL team has added what is known as a piezoelectric

resonator to the bottom plate; its purpose is to jiggle the bottom plate at a

very particular frequency.

The researchers found that as they changed the bottom plate's vibration

frequency, there were distinct dips in the number of neutrons detected outside

the plates - particular, well-spaced "resonant" frequencies that the neutrons

were inclined to absorb.

These frequencies, then, are the gravitational quantum states of neutrons,

essentially having energy bounced into them by the bottom plate, and the

researchers were able for the first time to force the neutrons from one quantum

state to another.

The differences in the frequencies - which are proportional to energy - of each

of these transitions will be an incredibly sensitive test of gravity at the

microscopic scale.

While it is easy to measure the effects of gravity on grander planetary or even

galactic scales, the force's weakness has meant its detailed nature has been

difficult to observe up until now. And any variations from the gravity that

Newton's theory predicts could be a hint of some new physics.

"With theory you can assume there's only purely Newton's gravity, then to make

a transition you need a certain energy," study co-author Peter Geltenbort of

the ILL told BBC News.

"Now we can compare this energy with what we've measured and if there is a

deviation then it would be a hint that Newton's gravity on these short

distances is not 100% valid."

Any such deviations could give hints of the postulated particle known as the

axion, which could in turn prove the existence and nature of dark matter.

"The experiments in astrophysics and astronomy give limits [for the axion's

existence] over long distances very stringently, but not for the short

distances. These are the same theories you would use to describe phenomena on a

large length scale, but we have with our method the possibility to look for

these axions on this short scale," Dr Geltenbort said.

The same holds true for supersymmetric particles, part of some formulations of

string theory that suggest that many extra dimensions exist over tiny length

scales, which would require the precision that is only now possible with the

team's approach.

"We'll never be as sensitive as the methods on those astronomical scales but we

can be far more sensitive on the scale between millimetres and less than

micrometres," Dr Geltenbort said.