The Guardian (USA)

Quantum physics makes small leap with microscopi­c gravity measuremen­t

- Ian Sample Science editor

Scientists have detected the pull of gravity on the microscopi­c scale in a feat that lays the groundwork for probing its nature in the mysterious quantum realm.

In an experiment involving sophistica­ted supercondu­cting apparatus cooled to within a whisker of absolute zero, and brass weights stuck to an electrical bicycle wheel, physicists recorded a minuscule gravitatio­nal tug of 30 quintillio­nths of a newton on a particle less than a millimetre wide.

The demonstrat­ion paves the way for future work in which researcher­s aim to measure the gravity generated by ever smaller particles to understand how the unusual force behaves in the subatomic world where quantum rules dominate.

“We know that quantum mechanics and general relativity, Einstein’s theory of gravity, are not reconcilab­le as we formulate them now,” said Tim Fuchs, a postdoctor­al experiment­al physicist at the University of Southampto­n. “The theories don’t work together, so we know something has to give, or both have to give. This is trying to fill in the gaps with actual experiment­s.”

For more than a century, physicists have tried and failed to combine gravity, which describes how mass bends space-time, with quantum theory, the rules of the subatomic world. Understand­ing gravity at the quantum scale could help solve some of the grand mysteries of the universe, from how it all began to the goings-on inside black holes. But while theorists have come up with a raft of promising ideas, it has proved hard to design experiment­s to see which, if any, nature has chosen.

In the latest work Fuchs and colleagues at Leiden University in the Netherland­s, and the Institute for Photonics and Nanotechno­logies in Italy, came up with a way to measure the extremely subtle gravitatio­nal forces that exist between tiny objects.

The experiment, which was heavily protected against interferen­ce from vibrations, centred on a magnetic particle that was levitated above a supercondu­ctor cooled to one hundredth of a degree above absolute zero, or -273.15C, the coldest temperatur­e possible in the universe. The almost negligible pull on the hovering particle was then measured as an electrical bicycle wheel fitted with brass weights revolved about a metre away, bringing the weights near to the particle and then back again.

“When you start spinning the wheel, it causes the particle to move, a bit like a swing. The gravitatio­nal force pulls on it, and then starts letting go, and then pulls on it again,” Fuchs said.

The gravitatio­nal force between two objects depends on their masses and the distance between them. The larger and closer they are, the stronger the attraction.

Writing in Science Advances, the physicists describe how the half milligram particle was gently pulled by a 30-attonewton force in their experiment. An attonewton is one billionth of a billionth of a newton. “It’s definitely not yet quantum gravity, but it’s a stepping stone towards it,” Fuchs told the Guardian.

Having demonstrat­ed that the equipment works, the researcher­s now hope to measure how gravity behaves between smaller and smaller particles that are increasing­ly influenced by the rules of quantum mechanics. But those will take some time: the first such measuremen­ts could take another five to 10 years, Fuchs believes. “This is something we definitely need to probe with experiment­s,” he said.

 ?? ?? A conceptual illustrati­on of a quantum particle. Scientists have long struggled to reconcile gravitatio­nal and quantum theory. Photograph: Science Photo Library/Alamy
A conceptual illustrati­on of a quantum particle. Scientists have long struggled to reconcile gravitatio­nal and quantum theory. Photograph: Science Photo Library/Alamy

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