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University of Cambridge > Talks.cam > Theoretical Physics Colloquium > Detecting Dark Energy with Atom Interferometry
Detecting Dark Energy with Atom InterferometryAdd to your list(s) Download to your calendar using vCal
If you have a question about this talk, please contact Mahdi Godazgar. I will discuss the possibility that the nature of the dark energy driving the observed acceleration of the Universe on giga-parsec scales may be determined first through metre scale laboratory based atom interferometry experiments. I will begin by introducing the scalar fields that could be responsible for dark energy and show that in order to be compatible with fifth force constraints these fields must have a screening mechanism to hide their effects from us. Focusing in particular on one such screening mechanism, known as the chameleon effect, where the field’s mass becomes dependent on the environment. I will show that atom-interferometry experiments are ideally suited to detect the acceleration due to the fifth force of the chameleon field – this will then allow us to either rule out large regions of the chameleon parameter space or maybe one day to detect the force due to the dark energy field in the laboratory. This talk is part of the Theoretical Physics Colloquium series. This talk is included in these lists:
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