Short-range Tests of Gravitational Physics
ORAL
Abstract
Scenarios attempting to unify the Standard Model and General Relativity often include features that violate the Weak Equivalence Principle (WEP) and/or gravitational Inverse-Square Law (ISL). A violation of either the WEP or ISL at any length scale would bring into question our fundamental understanding of gravity. Motivated by these considerations, undergraduates and faculty at Humboldt State University are operating an experiment to probe gravitational physics below the 50-micron length scale. The experiment employs a torsion pendulum with equal masses of different material arranged as a ``composition dipole.'' We measure the twist of the torsion pendulum as an attractor mass is oscillated nearby in a parallel-plate configuration, providing a time varying torque on the pendulum. The size and distance dependence of the torque variation provide a means to search for any deviation from the WEP or ISL at untested distance scales. This talk will focus on the analysis of preliminary data and future experimental prospects.
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Authors
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C.D. Hoyle
Humboldt State University
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Z.D. Comden
Humboldt State University
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N.K. Dunkley
Humboldt State University
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N. Hernandez
Humboldt State University
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Hilde Isachsen
Humboldt State University
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J.S. Johnson
Humboldt State University
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G.D. Martinez
Humboldt State University
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A.E. Sanchez
Humboldt State University
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J.G. Stillman
Humboldt State University