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First search for non-Newtonian interactions at micrometer scale with a levitated test mass

ORAL

Abstract

I will discuss a search for non-Newtonian forces that couple to mass, with a characteristic scale of 10 μm, using an optically levitated microsphere as a precision force sensor. A silica microsphere trapped in an upward-propagating, single-beam, optical tweezer is utilized to probe for interactions sourced from a nanofabricated attractor mass with a density modulation brought into close proximity to the microsphere and driven along the axis of periodic density in order to excite an oscillating response. We obtain force sensitivity of ≤10-16 N/√Hz. Separately searching for attractive and repulsive forces results in the constraint on a new Yukawa interaction of |α| ≥ 108 for λ > 10 μm. This is the first test of the inverse-square law using an optically levitated test mass of dimensions comparable to λ, a complementary method subject to a different set of system effects compared to more established techniques. Near-term improvements to the apparatus and experimental technique are expected to push the sensitivity into unexplored parameter space.

Publication: Review of Scientific Instruments 91, 083201 (2020) (https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0011759);<br>Physical Review D 104, L061101 (https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.104.L061101)

Presenters

  • Charles P Blakemore

    Stanford University

Authors

  • Charles P Blakemore

    Stanford University

  • Alexander Fieguth

    Stanford Univ

  • Akio Kawasaki

    Stanford Univ

  • Nadav Priel

    Stanford university

  • Denzal Martin

    Stanford University

  • Alexander Rider

    SRI

  • Qidong Wang

    Institute of Microelectronics of the Chinese Academy of Sciences

  • Giorgio Gratta

    Stanford Univ