Spatial variation in the fine-structure constant -- new results from VLT/UVES
Julian A. King, John K. Webb, Michael T. Murphy, Victor V. Flambaum,, Robert F. Carswell, Matthew B. Bainbridge, Michael R. Wilczynska, F., Elliot Koch

TL;DR
This study analyzes quasar absorption spectra from VLT/UVES and Keck to investigate spatial variations in the fine-structure constant alpha, revealing a statistically significant dipole pattern across the sky that suggests alpha varies with cosmological distance.
Contribution
It provides the first combined analysis of VLT and Keck data showing a significant dipole variation in alpha across the sky, with robust checks ruling out systematic effects.
Findings
Evidence for a dipole variation in alpha across the sky.
The dipole model is statistically significant at 4.1 sigma.
The variation amplitude grows with lookback-time distance.
Abstract
(abridged) We present a new analysis of a large sample of quasar absorption-line spectra obtained using UVES (the Ultraviolet and Visual Echelle Spectrograph) on the VLT (Very Large Telescope) in Chile. In the VLT sample (154 absorbers), we find evidence that alpha increases with increasing cosmological distance from Earth. However, as previously shown, the Keck sample (141 absorbers) provided evidence for a smaller alpha in the distant absorption clouds. Upon combining the samples an apparent variation of alpha across the sky emerges which is well represented by an angular dipole model pointing in the direction RA=(17.3 +/- 1.0) hr, dec. = (-61 +/- 10) deg, with amplitude (0.97 +0.22/-0.20) x 10^(-5). The dipole model is required at the 4.1 sigma statistical significance level over a simple monopole model where alpha is the same across the sky (but possibly different to the current…
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