Search for varying constants of nature from astronomical observation of molecules
Abstract
The status of searches for possible variation in the constants of nature from astronomical observation of molecules is reviewed, focusing on the dimensionless constant representing the proton-electron mass ratio μ=mp/me. The optical detection of H2 and CO molecules with large ground-based telescopes (as the ESO-VLT and the Keck telescopes), as well as the detection of H2 with the Cosmic Origins Spectrograph aboard the Hubble Space Telescope is discussed in the context of varying constants, and in connection to different theoretical scenarios. Radio astronomy provides an alternative search strategy bearing the advantage that molecules as NH3 (ammonia) and CH3OH (methanol) can be used, which are much more sensitive to a varying μ than diatomic molecules. Current constraints are |μ/μ| < 5 × 10-6 for redshift z=2.0-4.2, corresponding to look-back times of 10-12.5 Gyrs, and |μ/μ| < 1.5 × 10-7 for z=0.88, corresponding to half the age of the Universe (both at 3σ statistical significance). Existing bottlenecks and prospects for future improvement with novel instrumentation are discussed.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.