Search for a drifting proton--electron mass ratio from H$_2$
Wim Ubachs, Julija Bagdonaite, Edcel J. Salumbides, Michael T. Murphy,, Lex Kaper

TL;DR
This paper reviews methods and results from astronomical and laboratory studies using H$_2$ absorption spectra to investigate potential variations in the proton-electron mass ratio over cosmological timescales, providing constraints and discussing future strategies.
Contribution
It offers a comprehensive overview of observational, laboratory, and theoretical approaches to detect variations in $mma$, including recent constraints from quasar absorption systems.
Findings
Current observations constrain $mma$ variation to less than 5×10^{-6} over 10-12 billion years.
Analysis of 10 quasar systems shows no significant variation in $mma$ within measurement uncertainties.
Future observational strategies are discussed to improve constraints and explore environmental dependencies.
Abstract
An overview is presented of the H quasar absorption method to search for a possible variation of the proton--electron mass ratio on a cosmological time scale. Details of the analysis of astronomical spectra, obtained with large 8--10 m class optical telescopes, equipped with high-resolution echelle grating based spectrographs, are explained. The methods and results of the laboratory molecular spectroscopy of H, in particular the laser-based metrology studies for the determination of rest wavelengths of the Lyman and Werner band absorption lines, are reviewed. Theoretical physics scenarios delivering a rationale for a varying will be discussed briefly, as well as alternative spectroscopic approaches to probe variation of , other than the H method. Also a recent approach to detect a dependence of the proton-to-electron mass ratio on environmental…
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