Sub-millimeter Spatial Oscillations of Newton's Constant: Theoretical Models and Laboratory Tests
Leandros Perivolaropoulos

TL;DR
This paper explores theoretical models predicting sub-millimeter oscillations in Newton's gravitational constant and tests these predictions using torsion balance experiments, finding slight, statistically insignificant hints of such oscillations.
Contribution
It identifies nonlocal gravity theories as naturally stable models with sub-millimeter oscillations and analyzes experimental data for potential signatures of these deviations.
Findings
Oscillating deviations fit the data better than constant Newtonian residuals.
Best-fit wavelength matches the dark energy length scale (~0.1mm).
Statistical significance of the fit is below 2 sigma.
Abstract
We investigate the viability of sub-millimeter wavelength oscillating deviations from the Newtonian potential at both the theoretical and the experimental/observational level. At the theoretical level such deviations are generic predictions in a wide range of extensions of General Relativity (GR) including theories, massive Brans-Dicke theories, compactified extra dimension models and nonlocal extensions of GR. However, the range of parameters associated with such oscillating deviations is usually connected with instabilities. An exception emerges in nonlocal gravity theories where oscillating deviations from Newtonian potential occur naturally on sub-millimeter scales without instabilities. As an example of a model with unstable Newtonian oscillations we review an expansion around General Relativity of the form with pointing out…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
