Dark energy has topped cosmologists’ “most wanted” list since 1998, when astronomers noticed that the expansion of the universe is speeding up rather than slowing down. The entity responsible—whatever it is—must be incredibly powerful, constituting nearly 70 percent of the universe. Figuring out the identity of this dark energy is “arguably the most important problem in physics,” said of the University of Nottingham in the United Kingdom.
Now a team of physicists has directly tested one option for dark energy using not or satellites, but a vacuum chamber fashioned on a tabletop.
The most straightforward explanation for dark energy is that it is the energy inherent in the vacuum of space itself. In this model, every teaspoonful of space brims with the same amount of dark energy, a value known as the cosmological constant. But there’s a major flaw in this simple solution. Physicists’ best calculation of this energy, which is thought to be due to the constant appearance and disappearance of “virtual” quantum particles, the actual observed value by a factor of 10120.
Dark energy has the same value everywhere in a “cosmological constant” model. If dark energy is described by a “chameleon” field instead, it would have only minor effects around massive objects such as Earth. NASA/Chameleon models are not especially well motivated from the standpoint of fundamental physics, admits Burrage, who began studying them in graduate school, but since dark energy presents such a profound mystery, physicists are willing to consider just about anything.
Last August, Burrage and her colleagues posted a on the scientific preprint site suggesting a way to lay a trap for these cagey cosmic chameleons. They envisioned a vacuum chamber about the size of a bowling ball with a marble-size sphere at its center. The chameleon field, assuming it was there, would be minimized near the walls of the chamber and immediately around the central sphere. It would have a higher value in the empty space between them. That means that an atom—whose own mass is too small to kill off the chameleon field—placed inside the vacuum chamber would feel a different force from the field depending on its position in the chamber.
Pulses of laser light could be used to track the atom’s movement in the chamber at three different times. If the tracking revealed an unexplained acceleration, it could be due to the force of a chameleon field. “You use the light beam as a ruler, and you just watch the atoms moving across the ruler,” said , the head of the Center for Cold Matter at Imperial College London and the lead experimentalist on the team proposing the test.
After devising the chameleon trap, Hinds and his team set out to build it; he expects to get the first results in a few months. But other physicists led by at the University of California, Berkeley, already had a similar setup in their lab, so they got a head start on the tests and reported their first results in a posted to arxiv.org on Feb. 13 and submitted to a prominent peer-reviewed journal. (Müller declined to comment for this article, as the journal’s policies forbid him from speaking directly to the media until shortly before the paper is published.)
, a theoretical astrophysicist at Columbia University, said such experiments are interesting, but not for their ability to shed light on dark energy. That is because cosmic acceleration, according to chameleon models, would be caused not by any camouflaging behavior on the part of the field but simply by the value of its lowest-energy state. Instead, the experiments are “testing the chameleon mechanism,” he said—the general idea that the universe could harbor undetected scalar fields that interact with matter.
, a physicist at Harvard who attended Müller’s talk there, said the method holds a lot of promise. Such high-precision instruments should “really push the frontier of our understanding of the universe,” he said, but he added that “the big thing would be to really observe something” rather than rule models out.
To date, cosmological observations have had an edge in this regard, said , another Harvard physicist at the talk. “They’ve actually seen effects that we can’t explain,” he said, referring to the observations that revealed dark energy.
Still, some of those who trade in cosmic observations are impressed with the new study. “That was a very neat idea,” said of the University of Heidelberg in Germany. “It’s quite different from other kinds of tests we are used to for dark energy.” She led a team that recently the predictions of various models of dark energy with observations from the Planck satellite and other telescopes. The combined data from all sources revealed the faintest hint of a deviation from the simplest dark-energy model based on the cosmological constant.
If chameleon models are one day ruled out completely, “then that is great,” said of the University of Cape Town in South Africa, who co-developed the more than a decade ago. “It is exciting to be able to propose a theory that can be tested and ruled out in a reasonable time frame.”
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