Progress on Short-range Tests of Gravity at Humboldt State University
ORAL
Abstract
Due to discrepancies between the Standard Model and General Relativity, gravitational experiments have remained at the forefront of experimental physics research in an effort to unify these models. Theories which attempt this unification often include features that violate the Weak Equivalence Principle (WEP) and/or the gravitational Inverse-Square Law (ISL), potentially bringing our fundamental understanding of gravity into question.Therefore, students and faculty and Humboldt State have constructed an apparatus that will measure the effects of gravity at a submillimeter scale. This experiment measures the twist of a torsion pendulum as an attractor mass is oscillated nearby, providing a time-varying torque on the pendulum. In the experiment, the size and distance dependence of the torque are measured, thereby providing means to determine deviations from accepted models of gravity on untested distance scales. As with all gravitational experiments, characterization of systematic effects due to environmental fluctuations is paramount. This talk will focus on the development of a system to assess the impact of temperature variations on the apparatus and give a general status update on this work.
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Presenters
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Kassandra A. Weber
Humboldt State University
Authors
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Kassandra A. Weber
Humboldt State University
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C.D. D Hoyle
Humboldt State University
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Nicholas Hernandez
Humboldt State University
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Jackson Stillman
Humboldt State University