The PVLAS experiment operates an ellipsometer based on a Fabry-Perot optical cavity that embraces a superconducting rotating dipole magnet and can measure the ellipticity induced by the magnetic field onto linearly polarized laser light. With a residual pressure less than 10(-7) mbar the apparatus gives ellipticity signals at the level of 10(-11)rad per passage through 1m of 5 Tesla transverse magnetic field of 532nm wavelength laser light. These signals can be interpreted as being generated largely by vacuum birefringence. If this interpretation is valid, a tool has become available to characterize physical properties of vacuum as if it were an ordinary transparent medium. The main source of the induced ellipticity could be the existence of ultralight bosons with mass of the order of 10(-3) eV that would couple to two photons and would be created in the experiment by interactions of photons of the laser beam with virtual photons of the magnetic field. The apparatus is calibrated in amplitude and in phase by measuring Cotton-Mouton ellipticity in gases. The ellipticity induced in vacuum has phase opposite to that of the CME ellipticity induced with noble gases in the interaction region. If the ellipticity signals observed in vacuum are due to authentic quantum vacuum birefringence and not to the apparatus, and a microscopic interpretation of the effect in terms of existence of spin zero ultralight bosons is valid, the observed phase of the ellipticity implies a positive parity of the bosons. The ultralight bosons would then be scalars.

Zavattini, E., Zavattini, G., Temnikov, P., Ruoso, G., Raiteri, G., Polacco, E., et al. (2007). Experimental observation of vacuum birefringence. NUCLEAR PHYSICS B-PROCEEDINGS SUPPLEMENTS, 174, 233-236 [10.1016/j.nuclphysbps.2007.08.132].

Experimental observation of vacuum birefringence

Della Valle, Federico;
2007-01-01

Abstract

The PVLAS experiment operates an ellipsometer based on a Fabry-Perot optical cavity that embraces a superconducting rotating dipole magnet and can measure the ellipticity induced by the magnetic field onto linearly polarized laser light. With a residual pressure less than 10(-7) mbar the apparatus gives ellipticity signals at the level of 10(-11)rad per passage through 1m of 5 Tesla transverse magnetic field of 532nm wavelength laser light. These signals can be interpreted as being generated largely by vacuum birefringence. If this interpretation is valid, a tool has become available to characterize physical properties of vacuum as if it were an ordinary transparent medium. The main source of the induced ellipticity could be the existence of ultralight bosons with mass of the order of 10(-3) eV that would couple to two photons and would be created in the experiment by interactions of photons of the laser beam with virtual photons of the magnetic field. The apparatus is calibrated in amplitude and in phase by measuring Cotton-Mouton ellipticity in gases. The ellipticity induced in vacuum has phase opposite to that of the CME ellipticity induced with noble gases in the interaction region. If the ellipticity signals observed in vacuum are due to authentic quantum vacuum birefringence and not to the apparatus, and a microscopic interpretation of the effect in terms of existence of spin zero ultralight bosons is valid, the observed phase of the ellipticity implies a positive parity of the bosons. The ultralight bosons would then be scalars.
2007
Zavattini, E., Zavattini, G., Temnikov, P., Ruoso, G., Raiteri, G., Polacco, E., et al. (2007). Experimental observation of vacuum birefringence. NUCLEAR PHYSICS B-PROCEEDINGS SUPPLEMENTS, 174, 233-236 [10.1016/j.nuclphysbps.2007.08.132].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11365/1035063