Stringent constraints on fundamental constant evolution using conjugate 18 cm satellite OH lines
Nissim Kanekar (1), Tapasi Ghosh (2), Jayaram N. Chengalur (1) ((1), National Centre for Radio Astrophysics, India, (2) Arecibo Observatory, USA)

TL;DR
This study uses conjugate satellite OH lines observed with the Arecibo Telescope to place the most stringent constraints yet on the possible variation of fundamental constants, specifically the combination of the proton-electron mass ratio and the fine structure constant, over 2.9 billion years.
Contribution
It provides the first high-precision measurement of the evolution of the combined constant μα² using conjugate satellite OH lines, improving constraints on fundamental constant variation.
Findings
No significant change in μα² over 2.9 Gyr.
Most stringent constraint on fractional change in μα² from astronomy.
Systematic effects are effectively ruled out in this measurement.
Abstract
We have used the Arecibo Telescope to carry out one of the deepest-ever integrations in radio astronomy, targetting the redshifted conjugate satellite OH 18 cm lines at towards PKS1413+135. The satellite OH 1720 and 1612 MHz lines are respectively in emission and absorption, with exactly the same line shapes due to population inversion in the OH ground state levels. Since the 1720 and 1612 MHz line rest frequencies have different dependences on the fine structure constant and the proton-electron mass ratio , a comparison between their measured redshifts allows one to probe changes in and with cosmological time. In the case of conjugate satellite OH 18 cm lines, the predicted perfect cancellation of the sum of the line optical depths provides a strong test for the presence of systematic effects that might limit their use in probing…
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