Suspended animation - testing Newtonian gravity at the micron scale

ORAL

Abstract

An active experimental front in the modern study of Gravity is testing the (Newtonian) law of gravitation at the 1 μm – 100 μm length scale. Electromagnetic forces are several orders of magnitude stronger than gravity, and pose a formidable challenge in any experiment aiming to measure the latter. This work describes results from a platform based on optically trapped neutral microspheres that probes deviations from Newtonian gravity. In addition to modest improvements to a previous iteration of the experimental apparatus, we present a novel technique that allows further suppression of electromagnetic backgrounds. This technique, which relies an optomechanical force sensor, provides a complementary technique to previous searches that have largely relied on variations of mechanical springs.

*This work was supported by funding from the NSF, ONR and the Heising-Simons Foundation.

Publication: 10.1103/PhysRevD.104.L061101
10.1126/sciadv.abo2361

Presenters

  • Gautam Venugopalan

    • Stanford University

Authors

  • Gautam Venugopalan

    • Stanford University
  • Alexander Fieguth

    • Stanford University
  • Nadav Priel

    • Stanford university
  • Charles P Blakemore

    • Stanford University
  • Lorenzo Magrini

    • Univ of Vienna
  • Giorgio Gratta

    • Stanford University