MTV/MTV-G Experiment at TRIUMF Search of T-Violation and Gravity Signal at Nuclear Scale
Author(s) -
Saki Tanaka,
H. Baba,
J.A. Behr,
T. Iguri,
H. Kawamura,
P. Levy,
Yusuke Nakaya,
R. Narikawa,
K. Ninomiya,
Junichi Onishi,
Mathew Pearson,
R. Openshaw,
Shuntaro Saiba,
R. Tanuma,
Yumi Totsuka,
J. Murata
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
proceedings of the 12th asia pacific physics conference (appc12)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.7566/jpscp.1.013063
Subject(s) - physics , scale (ratio) , signal (programming language) , nuclear physics , astronomy , computer science , quantum mechanics , programming language
The MTV-G (MTV-Gravity) experiment is aiming to detect a strong gravitational field at around nuclear scale, utilizing an electron polarimeter of the MTV (Mott Polarimetry for T-Violation) experiment [1], which is searching a large T-Violating electron transverse polarization emitted in polarized Li-8 beta decay. The MTV experiment is running at TRIUMF-ISAC since 2009, yielding the highest precision test of T-Violation. The extreme sensitivity of the MTV polarimeter gives us an opportunity to perform a new type of gravity experiment. A modification of gravitational inverse square law at a microscopic scale is predicted by a large extra-dimension model in order to explain the hierarchy problem. The strong gravitational field can be detected as a large spin precession of electrons scattered from nuclei, caused by the “Geodetic precession” as a result of a warped space-time around the nuclear mass. In this experiment, longitudinal polarization of electrons emitted from a 90 Sr source is transferred into a transverse polarization via electromagnetic Thomas precession and possibly via the Geodetic precession.
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