Probing deformed commutators with macroscopic harmonic oscillators
- PMID: 26088965
- PMCID: PMC4557370
- DOI: 10.1038/ncomms8503
Probing deformed commutators with macroscopic harmonic oscillators
Abstract
A minimal observable length is a common feature of theories that aim to merge quantum physics and gravity. Quantum mechanically, this concept is associated with a nonzero minimal uncertainty in position measurements, which is encoded in deformed commutation relations. In spite of increasing theoretical interest, the subject suffers from the complete lack of dedicated experiments and bounds to the deformation parameters have just been extrapolated from indirect measurements. As recently proposed, low-energy mechanical oscillators could allow to reveal the effect of a modified commutator. Here we analyze the free evolution of high-quality factor micro- and nano-oscillators, spanning a wide range of masses around the Planck mass mP (≈ 22 μg). The direct check against a model of deformed dynamics substantially lowers the previous limits on the parameters quantifying the commutator deformation.
Figures
. Red solid lines are the fits with Equation 8, dashed lines report the 95% confidence area. In the inset, we report the values of the quadratic coefficient b measured for the membrane oscillator at different excitation amplitudes, with their 95% confidence error bars (for appreciating the improvement in the accuracy, we just show the positive vertical semi-axis in logarithmic scale). For the two points at highest amplitude, the measured b is significantly different from zero. The green lines show the interval of b calculated from the nonlinear behaviour observed in the frequency domain for stronger excitation.
below which new physics could come into play. Full symbols reports its upper limits obtained in this work, as a function of the mass. Red dots: from the dependence of the oscillation frequency from its amplitude; magenta stars: from the third harmonic distortion. In the former data set, for the intermediate mass range (10–100 μg), we report the results obtained with two different oscillators. Light blue shows the area below the electroweak scale, dark blue the area that remains unexplored. Dashed lines report some previously estimated upper limits, obtained in mass ranges outside this graph (as indicated by the arrows). Green: from high-resolution spectroscopy on the hydrogen atom, considering the ground state Lamb shift (upper line) and the 1S–2S level difference (lower line). Magenta: from the AURIGA detector. Yellow: from the lack of violation of the equivalence principle. The vertical line corresponds to the Planck mass (22 μg).References
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