A study
that will 'test our understanding of how the Universe works, particularly
outside the relatively narrow confines of our planet' is being undertaken by an
international team of researchers led by the University of Leicester.
The
research probes whether the fundamental laws of physics are the same everywhere
in the universe. In their new study, the Leicester-led team assesses whether
these laws are the same within the hot, dense conditions in the atmosphere of a
dying white dwarf star as here on Earth.
These stars
have masses around half that of the Sun compressed into a radius similar to
that of the Earth, leading to extreme gravity within the atmosphere of the
star.
The
preliminary analysis, led by the research group of Professor Martin Barstow,
Pro-Vice-Chancellor; Strategic Science Projects Director, Leicester Institute
of Space & Earth Observation; Professor of Astrophysics & Space
Science, Department of Physics & Astronomy, features on the cover of the
online journal Universe.
Postdoctoral
researcher Matthew Bainbridge is the lead author of the early-stage study
titled "Probing the Gravitational Dependence of the Fine-Structure
Constant from Observations of White Dwarf Stars."
The study
involved Matthew Bainbridge, Martin Barstow and Nicole Reindl from Leicester
along with colleagues from the U.S., France, The Netherlands, Australia and
collaborators in the U.K..
The
researchers use the light of white dwarf stars observed with the Hubble Space
Telescope. Dr Nicole Reindl, leading the observations, says: "These
particular stars contain metals, such as Iron and Nickel, floating within the
surface layers of their atmospheres. The light generated within the depths of
the star passes through the heavy metals, leaving behind a "fingerprint"
in the stars' light that we can study."
Tiny
differences in the wavelengths of the light that passes through these heavy
metals, compared to experiments here on Earth, gives us clues about potential
differences in the fundamental laws of physics under extreme gravity compared
to here on Earth.
"Studying
these fingerprints in detail requires very precise measurements of the
wavelength, or colour, of the light emerging from the atmospheres of these
stars" says Dr Matthew Bainbridge, who has been working on the detailed
analysis techniques needed to detect the tiny changes expected. "The
project is ongoing, but we have established a sophisticated new method and have
demonstrated how successful it is on nine stars."
This is a
unique study that brings together our expertise and that of world leaders in a
variety of fields including observational astronomy, cosmology, experimental
atomic physics and high energy theoretical physics. Cosmology studies the
origin and evolution of the universe and, since the birth of science, has
inspired fundamental shifts in our understanding of our place in the Universe.
Project
leader Professor Martin Barstow adds: "This new work will test our
understanding of how the Universe works, particularly outside the relatively
narrow confines of our planet. We anticipate that our results will challenge
current theoretical ideas in cosmology."
Read more
at: https://phys.org/news/2017-09-unique-fundamental-laws-physics.html#jCp
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