Physics Club: David C. Moore, Yale University, “Precision searches for new physics using optically levitated sensors”

Event time: 
Monday, January 22, 2018 - 3:30pm to 4:30pm
Location: 
Sloane Physics Laboratory (SPL), 57 See map
217 Prospect Street
New Haven, CT 06511
Event description: 

New technologies building on tools developed in atomic and optical physics are opening the “precision” frontier of nuclear and particle physics. These experiments aim to detect tiny deviations from the Standard Model arising from processes that may occur at energies out of reach of existing direct searches at accelerators. Experiments at the precision frontier can enable new searches for physics related to dark matter, dark energy, or the microscopic nature of gravity, potentially providing our first laboratory evidence for these beyond the Standard Model processes.

I will describe work to develop optomechanical force sensors capable of detecting sub-attonewton forces acting on optically trapped, micron-sized test masses. Such sensors can allow the detection of new forces that appear at shorter distance, or weaker coupling, than could be identified with previous techniques. I will present results to-date from using these sensors to search for for dark matter particles with tiny electric charges as well as new forces that appear in certain models attempting to account for dark energy. Future development of these techniques can enable a new generation of sensitive searches for “fifth” forces that could arise from physics beyond the Standard Model.

Host: Nir Navon

Tea after the talk in Sloane Physics Lab 3rd Floor Lounge