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Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high-resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wale Sydney, Australia KVI, Friday 31 August 2007

Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

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Page 1: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental

constants using high-resolution quasar

spectroscopy

John K. WebbUniversity of New South WalesSydney, AustraliaKVI, Friday 31 August 2007

Page 2: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

• Why our particular set of (numerical values for) the fundamental constants (given the system of units)? Anthropic explanation? Should we be able to explain the numerical values from first principles?

• Fine tuning: Eg, electromagnetic coupling constant, = 1/137. Slight decrease: molecular bonds break at lower T, number of stable elements in periodic table increases. A 4% change would shut down stellar heavy element production – no life. Many other examples.

• Were our present-day constants laid down a the beginning or have they evolved into a more finely-tuned set?

• What is a fundamental constant? We formulate the “physical laws” in terms of observables, which = measurements wrt to some standard, but is that fundamental or merely “human”?

• Dimensional vs dimensionless. Does it make any sense to generate theories in which, eg, c varies? What changes can we actually look for?

• Should (can?) all physical laws be satisfactorily re-expressed in terms of dimensionless constants?

“Fundamental” constants

Page 3: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

History: Dirac, Milne, 1937. The first to ask “Do the constants of Nature vary?”

Theoretical motivation: unification models – more dimensions (“compactified”). Cosmological evolution? String theories generically allow for variations.

Page 4: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

Dimensionless ratios – the things we can actually check

Page 5: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

To Earth

CIVSiIVCIISiII

Lyem

Ly forest

Lyman limit Ly

NVem

SiIVem

CIVem

Lyem

Ly SiII

quasar

Quasars: physics laboratories in the early universe

Page 6: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

e

p

m

m

Page 7: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

DLAs with molecular hydrogen

• ~17,000 quasars with z>2.3 now known. Only ~15 known to have H2

• Claim that ~1/5 of all DLAs have H2

QSO 2348-011Q1443+272

Page 8: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,
Page 9: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,
Page 10: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

Extracting from high redshift quasar spectra (mp/me)

The Born-Oppenheimer approximation relates vibrational-rotational and electronic frequencies to , can be used to express the wavelength dependence of an observed H2 transition on a fractional change in , = (z – 0)/0

ii

zi Kz

1)1(

0 Calculated

Measured in laboratory experiment

Observed (rest-frame) H2 wavelength from quasar spectrum

This can be conveniently expressed as a simple linear relationship:

Page 11: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

Reinhold et al PRL April 2006

Page 12: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

First quasar, Q0347-383

Single velocity component

Page 13: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

H2 lines in the Lyman alpha forest of Q0347

Page 14: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

H2 lines in the Lyman alpha forest of Q0347H2 lines in the Lyman alpha forest of Q0347

Page 15: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

H2 lines in the Lyman alpha forest of Q0347H2 lines in the Lyman alpha forest of Q0347

Page 16: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

H2 lines in the Lyman alpha forest of Q0347H2 lines in the Lyman alpha forest of Q0347

Page 17: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

H2 lines in the Lyman alpha forest of Q0347

H2HI

H2 lines in the Lyman alpha forest of Q0347

Page 18: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

A. “Raw” error bars

Page 19: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

B. Constant added to error bars forcing (2 = 1

Page 20: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

C. Raw error bars, iteratively 3 clipped forcing (2 = 1

Page 21: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

A. Reduced redshift method, raw error bars2)/ = 1.61 B. Reduced redshift method, grown error bars2)/ = 1.0 (forced) C. 3 clip, raw errors 2)/ = 1.0 (forced) D. Solving directly for internal to VPFIT:

Results for 0347-383

Page 22: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

Second quasar, Q0528-250

Multiple velocity components

Page 23: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

J=0 J=1

Page 24: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

J=3J=2

Page 25: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

J=4

Note:a) Decrease in component

line width of the lines as J increases (not seen before?)

b) Increased strength in right hand component as J increases

Page 26: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

How many free parameters should be fitted?

Page 27: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

How many free parameters should be fitted?

“Right” answer probably somewhere in there, but where?

Page 28: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

How many free parameters should be fitted?

Aikaike Information Criterion: 0528-250: There are clearly at least 2 velocity components, very probably 3 (all previous analyses had fitting one single component)

Page 29: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

2 H2 components, “raw” error bars

Page 30: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

3 H2 components, “raw” error bars

Page 31: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

Results for 0528-250

3H2:VPFIT internal method (no clipping) :

Reduced redshift method (no clipping):

3 clipping:

2H2:

Page 32: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

1) Re-computation of Voigt function, H(a,u), finer interpolation.

2) Calculating Voigt profile, sub-divide spectral pixels, integrate over each pixel.

3) Calculating d/dp prone to error, can result in poor chisq-parameter curves.

4) Problem requires “physical constraints”- H2 lines can be unresolved, keeping b free for every line can severely ill-condition the matrices, rendering solutions meaningless. Solution: “tie” parameters, or sometimes fix uninteresting parameters, but must explore the consequences external to the non-linear least-squares procedure.

5) Best method probably to solve for explicitly within the non-linear least-squares procedure, but:

- Ensure matrix equations are well-conditioned; - All algorithmic parameters (eg stopping criterion, finite-difference derivatives)

should account for machine precision limits.- Absorption line parameters, where necessary, are re-scaled to minimise dynamic

range in Hessian and gradient matrices;- Check everything with synthetic spectra;- Improve systematic errors estimating, and chisq-parameter space exploration,

probably via Markov-Chain Monte-Carlo methods (work in progress)

Some technical points for the numerical-methods enthusiast

Page 33: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

c

e

2

Page 34: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

Metal absorption

Over 60 000 data points!

Quasar Q1759+75

H absorption

H emission

C IV doublet

C IV 1550ÅC IV 1548Å

QSO absorption lines:

• A Keck/HIRES doublet

Separation 2

Page 35: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

Parameters describing ONE absorption line

b (km/s)

1+z)rest

N (atoms/cm2)

3 Cloud parameters: b, N, z

“Known” physics parameters: rest, f,

Page 36: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

Cloud parameters describing TWO (or more) absorption lines from the same species (eg. MgII 2796 + MgII 2803 A)

z

b

bN

Still 3 cloud parameters (with no assumptions), but now there are more physics parameters

Page 37: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

Cloud parameters describing TWO absorption lines from different species (eg. MgII 2796 + FeII 2383 A)

b(FeII)b(MgII)

z(FeII)

z(MgII)

N(FeII)N(MgII)

i.e. a maximum of 6 cloud parameters, without any assumptions

Page 38: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

However…

bobserved2 b b

kT

mcons tthermal bulk

2 2 2tan

T is the cloud temperature, m is the atomic mass

So we understand the relation between (eg.) b(MgII) and b(FeII). The extremes are:

A: totally thermal broadening, bulk motions negligible,

B: thermal broadening negligible compared to bulk motions,

b MgIIm Fe

m Mgb FeII Kb FeII( )

( )

( )( ) ( )

b MgII b FeII( ) ( )

Page 39: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

We can therefore reduce the number of cloud parameters describing TWO absorption lines from different species:

bKb

z

N(FeII)N(MgII)

i.e. 4 cloud parameters, with assumptions: no spatial or velocity segregation for different species

Page 40: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

How reasonable is the previous assumption?

FeII

MgII

Line of sight to Earth

Cloud rotation or outflow or inflow clearly results in a systematic bias for a given cloud. However, this is a random effect over and ensemble of clouds.

The reduction in the number of free parameters introduces no bias in the results

Page 41: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

The “alkali doublet method”

Resonance absorption lines such as CIV, SiIV, MgII are commonly

seen at high redshift in intervening gas clouds. Bethe & Salpeter 1977

showed that the of alkali-like doublets, i.e transitions of the

sort

are related to by

which leads to

:

:

2

1

221

2

)(

Note, measured relative to same ground state

2/12

2/12

2/32

2/12

PS

PS

Page 42: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

In addition to alkali-like doublets, many other more complex species are seen in quasar spectra. Note we now measure relative to different ground states

Ec

Ei

Represents differentFeII multiplets

The “Many-Multiplet method” (Webb et al. PRL, 82, 884, 1999; Dzuba et al. PRL, 82, 888, 1999) - use different multiplets simultaneously - order of magnitude improvement

Low mass nucleusElectron feels small potential and moves slowly: small relativistic correction

High mass nucleusElectron feels large potential and moves quickly: large relativistic correction

Page 43: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

Advantages of the Many Multiplet method

1. Includes the total relativistic shift of frequencies (e.g. for s-electron) i.e. it

includes relativistic shift in the ground state

(Spin-orbit method: splitting in excited state - relativistic correction is smaller, since excited electron is far from the nucleus)

2. Can include many lines in many multiplets

Ji

Jf

(Spin-orbit method: comparison of 2-3 lines of 1 multiplet due to selection rule for E1 transitions - cannot explore the full multiplet splitting)

1 fi JJ

3. Very large statistics - all ions and atoms, different frequencies, different

redshifts (epochs/distances)

4. Opposite signs of relativistic shifts helps to cancel some systematics.

Page 44: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

1. Zero Approximation – calculate transition frequencies using complete set of Hartree-Fock energies and wave functions;

2. Calculate all 2nd order corrections in the residual electron-electron interactions using many-body perturbation theory to calculate effective Hamiltonian for valence electrons including self-energy operator and screening; perturbation V = H-HHF.

This procedure reproduces the MgII energy levels to 0.2% accuracy (Dzuba, Flambaum, Webb, Phys. Rev. Lett., 82, 888, 1999)

Dependence of atomic transition frequencies on

Important points: (1) size of corrections are proportional to Z2, so effect is small in light atoms, greatest in heavy atoms;(2) greatest precision will be achieved when considering all relativistic effects (ie. including ground state)

Page 45: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

Highly exaggerated illustration of how transitions shift in different directions by different amounts – unique pattern

Page 46: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

Relativistic shift of the central line in the multiplet

Procedure1. Compare heavy (Z~30) and light (Z<10) atoms, OR

2. Compare s p and d p transitions in heavy atoms.

Shifts can be of opposite sign.

1qEE2

0

z0zz

Ez=0 is the laboratory frequency. 2nd term is non-zero only if has changed. q is derived from relativistic many-body calculations.

)S.L(KQq K is the spin-orbit splitting parameter. Q ~ 10K

Numerical examples:

Z=26 (s p) FeII 2383A: = 38458.987(2) + 1449x

Z=12 (s p) MgII 2796A: = 35669.298(2) + 120x

Z=24 (d p) CrII 2066A: = 48398.666(2) - 1267xwhere x = z02 - 1 MgII “anchor”

Page 47: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

Wavelength precision and q values

Page 48: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

Biggest shifts are around 300 m/s. Doppler searches for extra-solar planets reach ~3 m/s at similar spectral resolution (but far higher s/n).

Page 49: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

Low-z vs. High-z constraints:

/ = -5×10-5High-z Low-z

Page 50: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

Numerical procedure: Use minimum no. of free parameters to fit the data

Unconstrained optimisation (Gauss-Newton) non-linear least-squares method (modified version of VPFIT, explicitly included as a free parameter);

Uses 1st and 2nd derivates of with respect to each free parameter ( natural weighting for estimating ;

All parameter errors (including those for derived from diagonal terms of covariance matrix (assumes uncorrelated variables but Monte Carlo verifies this works well)

Page 51: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

Low redshift data: MgII and FeII (most susceptible to systematics)

Page 52: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

Low-z MgII/FeII systems:

Page 53: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

High-z damped Lyman- systems:

Page 54: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

Webb, Flambaum, Churchill, Drinkwater, Barrow PRL, 82, 884, 1999

Page 55: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

Webb, Murphy, Flambaum, Dzuba, Barrow, Churchill, Prochaska, Wolfe. PRL, 87, 091301-1, 2001

Page 56: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

Murphy, Webb, Flambaum, MNRAS, 345, 609, 2003

Page 57: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

Murphy, Webb, Flambaum, MNRAS, 345, 609, 2003

Page 58: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

High and low redshift samples are more or less independent

Page 59: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

/ = (-0.06 ± 0.06)×10-5

Chand, Srianand, Petitjean, Aracil (2004):

Page 60: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

A re-analysis, using the SAME data and SAME models:

Page 61: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

Results of re-fitting the SAME spectra:

Chand et al points

Page 62: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,
Page 63: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,
Page 64: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,
Page 65: Searching for cosmological variation of fundamental constants using high- resolution quasar spectroscopy John K. Webb University of New South Wales Sydney,

Concluding remark

The bottom line:

: current best data suggests a deviation from present day value, but large statistical result in preparation

: most probably a null result, but obviously better data is vital