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Four direct measurements of the fine-structure constant 13 billion years ago

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Fine-structure constant measurements 13 Ga ago, plus lower redshift data, test space-time variation of a fundamental constant. Observations of the redshift z = 7.085 quasar J1120+0641 are used to search… Click to show full abstract

Fine-structure constant measurements 13 Ga ago, plus lower redshift data, test space-time variation of a fundamental constant. Observations of the redshift z = 7.085 quasar J1120+0641 are used to search for variations of the fine structure constant, a, over the redshift range 5:5 to 7:1. Observations at z = 7:1 probe the physics of the universe at only 0.8 billion years old. These are the most distant direct measurements of a to date and the first measurements using a near-IR spectrograph. A new AI analysis method is employed. Four measurements from the x-shooter spectrograph on the Very Large Telescope (VLT) constrain changes in a relative to the terrestrial value (α0). The weighted mean electromagnetic force in this location in the universe deviates from the terrestrial value by Δα/α = (αz − α0)/α0 = (−2:18 ± 7:27) × 10−5, consistent with no temporal change. Combining these measurements with existing data, we find a spatial variation is preferred over a no-variation model at the 3:9σ level.

Keywords: structure constant; billion years; fine structure; four direct; direct measurements

Journal Title: Science Advances
Year Published: 2020

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