1 / 18

Local tests of spatial variation of m e /m p

Local tests of spatial variation of m e /m p. S. A. Levshakov Department of Theoretical Astrophysics Physical-Technical Institute, St. Petersburg. JINR, Dec 1-5, 2014. Department of Theoretical Astrophysics Physical-Technical Institute, St. Petersburg , 201. Low energies.

johana
Télécharger la présentation

Local tests of spatial variation of m e /m p

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Local tests of spatial variation of me/mp S. A. Levshakov Department of Theoretical Astrophysics Physical-Technical Institute, St. Petersburg JINR, Dec 1-5, 2014 Department of Theoretical Astrophysics Physical-Technical Institute, St. Petersburg , 201

  2. Low energies Einstein equivalence principle local Lorentz invariance (LLI) changingα can be associated with a violation ofLLI(Kostelecky et al. 2003) local position invariance (LPI) LPI : the outcome of any local non-gravitational experiment is independent of where and when it is performed, i.e., that the fundamental physical laws are space-time invariant μ = me /mp

  3. Measurements comparison of inversion (|Q| > 1) and rotational (Q=1) transitions Δμ/μ = (Vrot – Vinv)/(ΔQ c) = ΔV/(ΔQ c) ΔV= ΔV +ΔV+ΔV (= signal + Doppler noise + systematics) μ s n ΔV= 0 n ΔV=ΔV + ΔV μ s Effelsberg 100-m telescope

  4. Effelsberg 100-m telescope Line width 0.2 km/s ~ 0.001 km/s Line position uncertainty 0.15 km/s ~ 0.005 km/s Medicina 32-m telescope

  5. Systematics Time series Effelsberg New spectrometer: XFFTS (eXtended FFTS) Exposure time: 30 min/scan (ON+OFF) PSW 150 sec/point instability ofδV ~ 10 m/sdetected ~ 1/4th Δch

  6. recent estimate Effelsberg observations NH3 HC3N HC5N HC7N formal weighted mean: <ΔV>=3±6 m/s (1σ C.L.) Δμ/μ < 2 10-8 (3σ C.L.) Levshakov et al. 2013 ΔV=V – V rot inv

  7. precision of lab frequencies: ε= 14 m/s N2H+ (1-0) 93.2 GHz rotational transitions ε = 2.8 m/s HC3N (2-1) 18.2 GHz ε= 0.6 m/s NH3 (1,1) 23.7 GHz inversion transition ε= 0.3 m/s NH3 (11 - 21) 1215.2 GHz rotational transition uncertainty in VLSR of1 m/s ammonia method (ΔQ=3.5) limit on Δμ/μ ~10-9 (ifbased on NH3 only !)

  8. How to improve current Δμ/μ estimates? para- vs ortho-NH3 ! rotational transition of para-NH3 1215.2 GHz 644.4 GHz, i.e. in B9 ALMA band - 21 JK =11 z = 0.89

  9. Herschel/HIFI observations ofpara-andortho-NH3 rotational transitions Different absorption patterns ! VLSR star-forming region G10.6-0.4 (W31C) Persson et al. 2010 robust approach – to use para-NH3 only

  10. Estimate of Δμ/μ for local sources (MW): Δμ/μ = σV/(ΔQ c) if linewidth ΔV ~ 0.2 km/s (like in L1498), σV~ 0.001 km/s, S/N ~ 30 then σV = 0.69(S/N)-1(ΔVΔch)1/2 Δμ/μ ~ 10-9 Δch ~ 0.01 km/s gives and Δch ~ 1 kHz at 23.7 GHz Δch ~ 40 kHz at 1215 GHz but requires space observations at 1215 GHz

  11. Extragalactic NH3 absorptionwasobserved: z = 0.0028 LINER-type AGN NGC 660 NGC 3079 z = 0.0038 Seyfert IC 860 z = 0.0013 possible QSO Mangum et al. 2013 IR 15107+0724 z = 0.013 Arp 220 z = 0.018 Seyfert, ULIRG z = 6.34 HFLS3 Dusty star-forming galaxy, DSFG Riechers et al. 2013 if z > 1 then ground-based telescopes can be used for σV~ 0.1 km/s, S/N ~ 30, and ΔV ~ 20 km/s (like in PKS1830-211) Δμ/μ ~ 10-7 (based on NH3 only)

  12. Hydronium H3O+ Q -3.0 30-20 396 GHz o-H3O+ p-H3O+ 32-22 364 GHz -3.5 11-21 307 GHz +6.4 p-H3O+ Kozlov & Levshakov 2011 Kozlov, Porsev, Reimers 2011 p-H3O+ : ΔQ = Q307 – Q364 = 9.9 frequencies are in GHz three times ΔQammonia

  13. H3O+ observations (star-forming regions, MW) G34.3+0.15 linewidth ΔV = 3.5 km/s also detected towards Orion-KL, W51M, W3 IRS5 CSO 10.4-m telescope (Phillips et al. 1992)

  14. H3O+ observations (star-forming regions, MW) Orion-KL 307 GHz APEX 12-m telescope May, 2011 Molaro et al. (unpublished)

  15. H3O+ observations (star-forming regions, MW) Sagittarius B2 (~ 120 pc from the Galactic Center) p-H3O+ 364 GHz p-H3O+ 1632 GHz Palehampton et al. 2007 1655 GHz p-H3O+ ΔQ = Q1632 – Q364 = 2.0+3.5=5.5 line position uncertainties ~5 km/s Infrared Space Observatory (ISO) Δμ/μ < 3 10-6

  16. H3O+ observations (extragalactic) 364 GHz transition local starburst M82 van der Tak et al. 1992 Arp 220 if 364, 307 GHz line position uncertainties ~1 km/s JCMT 15-m telescope then Δμ/μ ~ 3 10-7

  17. Lab frequencies: ε~ 1 m/s 307.192406 GHz ε~ 1 m/s 364.797438 GHz ε~10 m/s (unresolved hfs components) p-H3O+ p-H3O+ withε~ 10 m/s limit on Δμ/μ ~ 3 10-9 (para-hydronium only)

  18. Conclusion High precision line position measurements ~ 0.01 km/s (Galactic molecular clouds) ~ 1 km/s (extragalactic molecular clouds) provide with ALMA facilities Δμ/μ ~ 3 10-9 (p-H3O+) Galactic ~ 10-8 (p-NH3 ) Δμ/μ ~ 3 10-7 (p-H3O+) extragalactic ~ 10-6 (p-NH3 ) Atacama Large Millimeter Array (ALMA) 0.3-9.6 mm

More Related