Measurement and theory of gravitational coupling between resonating beams
Tobias Brack, Bernhard Zybach, Fadoua Balabdaoui, Stephan Kaufmann,, Francesco Palmegiano, Jean-Claude Tomasina, Stefan Blunier, Donat, Scheiwiller, Jonas Fankhauser, J\"urg Dual

TL;DR
This paper presents a novel laboratory experiment measuring dynamic gravitational coupling between vibrating beams at 42 Hz, achieving high precision and aligning with Newtonian theory, opening new avenues for gravitational research.
Contribution
It introduces a fully-characterized high-frequency experiment to measure dynamic gravity between resonating beams, with detailed modeling and initial results consistent with Newtonian predictions.
Findings
Measured gravitational interaction amplitude within 3% of theory
Determined gravitational energy flow rate as 2.5E-20 J/s
Observed decay of gravitational coupling with distance as d^-4
Abstract
Recent spectacular results of gravitational waves obtained by the LIGO system, with frequencies in the 100 Hz regime, make corresponding laboratory experiments with full control over cause and effect of great importance. Dynamic measurements of gravitation in the laboratory have to date been scarce, due to difficulties in assessing non-gravitational crosstalk and the intrinsically weak nature of gravitational forces. In fact, fully controlled quantitative experiments have so far been limited to frequencies in the mHz regime. New experiments in gravity might also yield new physics, thereby opening avenues towards a theory that explains all of physics within one coherent framework. Here we introduce a new, fully-characterized experiment at three orders of magnitude higher frequencies. It allows experimenters to quantitatively determine the dynamic gravitational interaction between two…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Geophysics and Sensor Technology · Adaptive optics and wavefront sensing
