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  • There’s a number that holds some of the deepest secrets in the universe. It’s responsible

  • for how chemical reactions happen, how stars burn, and is so key to our existence that

  • if it were off by just a few percentage pointsyou, me, all of this, might not even be here.

  • And somehow, it comes out to 1/137. It’s a number that’s baffled scientists

  • for nearly a century, and according to physicist Richard Feynman,

  • isone of the biggest damn mysteries in physics.”

  • 1/137, otherwise known as the fine structure constant, or alpha,

  • is a fundamental constant of nature.

  • These numbers are the laws of the cosmos, governing everything

  • from the force of gravity to the behavior of quantum particles. And to understand

  • how we get alpha, we need an expert who’s been studying it for decades.

  • My name Is John Webb, I'm a professor of astrophysics at the University of New South Wales in Sydney,

  • and we're gonna be talking about varying constants of nature.

  • The fine-structure constant is formed from a ratio

  • involving the electron charge, the speed of light, and Planck's constant.

  • That is the quantity that physicists use to describe how

  • strong the electromagnetic force  is. The electromagnetic force is one of the known

  • four forces of nature. Very important, the force involved in keeping the structure of

  • atoms the way that they are.

  • Because alpha dictates the strength of the electromagnetic force,

  • it's not tied to the units we typically use to measure things like weight or distance.

  • It comes straight from nature itself, and that’s why alpha is dimensionless. A dimensionless

  • constant has no units associated with it, no meters, no seconds, nothing like that.

  • It's a pure number.

  • Alpha is a mystery, because its value, 1/137 comes to us with no explanation

  • as why it has that value. It’s a numerical coincidence, with huge implications for us.

  • If you change alpha, you change the way that atoms are held together. If it had been a

  • few percent different in the early universe, hydrogen, for example, might not have been

  • the most abundant element, but helium might have been. Stars would have evolved very differently,

  • the evolution of the chemical elements would have been very different to what it was, and

  • indeed human beings, rocky planets, might not even exist. For a small change in alpha.

  • And this notion of whether the constants of nature are as constant as we think, has

  • kept many physicists up late at night. The first mention of it in the scientific literature

  • was in 1874 by Lord Kelvin, and a friend of his Peter Tait. There were speculations

  • by Eddington and Hermann Weyl.

  • Paul Dirac wrote a paper speculating and physicist Wolfgang Pauli

  • famously quipped, “When I die, my first question to the Devil will be:

  • What is the meaning of the fine structure constant?”

  • Ironically, he passed away in Room 137 in a hospital in Zurich.

  • And to this day, no one’s figured it out.

  • I first started getting interested in alpha in the 1990s actually.

  • At that time the Keck telescope was collecting some amazingly good data.

  • By using observations from Keck and the VLT telescope in Chile, Webb and his team

  • published papers that found variations in alpha, depending on where you are in the universe,

  • and that’s been the subject of a spirited debate.

  • We've been working on this for quite a while, searching

  • to check whether there's any time or space variability of the fine-structure constant,

  • and so we do that by looking at quasars all over the sky. They're very bright

  • and they're quite small, actually.

  • They emit a huge amount of light from a very small volume of space.

  • It is thought that they are essentially the centers of galaxies, black holes powered

  • by accretion from material nearby.

  • Whilst they're fascinating objects as far as we're concerned, really,

  • they're just beacons of light shining along a huge path length through

  • the universe. Whilst that light is on the way, between the quasar and us, inevitably

  • it gets absorbed by things that intersect the sight line.

  • When light passes through the halo of an early galaxy,

  • it's as if it takes a snapshot of physics at that time.

  • Gaseous halos of early galaxies cause absorption dips in the spectrum of the quasar.

  • We see all sorts of elements in these absorption dips: iron, magnesium,

  • nickel, chromium, zinc, aluminum.

  • They use instruments called spectrographs to analyze the light coming from the quasars to our telescopes.

  • You can split the light up from the quasar

  • into its spectrum, and look at all of the different wavelengths that fall

  • onto your detector.

  • We know what the elements are. We know how much gas is present.

  • You can measure it very accurately and we can measure the physical conditions in the gas

  • clouds that are giving rise to this absorption. So you can think of it like a barcode on a

  • supermarket product, you see the black lines, and if you change alpha, they all change their

  • positions. If the fine structure constant were different at that time, then the amount

  • of energy required to get an electron to change its orbit from one level to another, would

  • be slightly different. We have a tentative signal that there is some kind of something

  • strange going on, a spatial variation. Because when we look in one direction in the universe,

  • we see alpha a little bit smaller.

  • And if you're looking in the opposite direction, it tends to be a little bit bigger.

  • Of course, that's been met with several criticisms, quite correctly. That's exactly how a science should proceed.

  • This is not a confirmed result. It was statistically kind of fairly significant, but the trouble

  • is the data are very complicated. The instruments are very complicated.

  • The calibration is very complicated.

  • As Carl Sagan once said, extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidenceespecially

  • when you're challenging the law of the cosmos.

  • So the European Southern Observatory

  • is going to put a brand new instrument called ESPRESSO to the test.

  • It’s a souped up spectrograph handled by lead project scientist, Paolo Molaro,

  • to hopefully nail this mystery.

  • Espresso is a spectrograph that is under vacuum and determines stabilities at the level of one milliKelvin.

  • The first thing that we had to make

  • is a cadre tray of optical elements to bring the light from the telescopes

  • to the lab. And this tray is composed of prisms, lenses, mirrors,

  • which exactly break the light from the telescope to the lab. When the light of the source is injected

  • in fibers and the fibers feed the spectrograph, which is contained in a vessel under vacuum

  • and there are different enclosures that make it terminally stable.

  • This is the different ball game now.

  • We will get very, very accurate data.

  • We had the first run and we are now in the middle of that processing.

  • We have to verify everything. So the first results will be about in one year.

  • And if ESPRESSO finds that the fine structure constant varies, it would be a very big deal.

  • It'd open the door to theories that predict multiple dimensions in space time and potentially,

  • a grand unified theory of physics.

  • But whether this number signifies some larger metaphysical

  • truth remains to be seen. There are kind of two schools of thought. One is that actually,

  • yes, we will one day when our knowledge advances, be able to explain why the fundamental constants,

  • including the dimensionless ones, have the values that they do. That's my belief too.

  • I think we will, one day. But there are other alternative ways of looking at this. It is

  • interesting that the constants that we do have seem to be finely tuned for our existence.

  • It leads to this idea of the anthropic principle, and the anthropic principle says basically

  • this, we shouldn't be surprised to see that the constants of nature are finely tuned for

  • our existence, because if they were not we would not be here, sitting around talking

  • about it. And maybe that's from this point of view, all you need.

  • In fact, they're finely tuned by the hand of God, that's one point of view that

  • many people probably do hold. There's another point of view, and that is, well, actually

  • there's an infinite number of universes, and each one of those universes has a different

  • set of physical laws and we just happen to be in one that we're able to, um, talk about.

  • I think Stephen Hawking liked that idea.

  • So there's multiple ideas, there's a lot of thoughts, and

  • we're probably still at the early days of our understanding.

There’s a number that holds some of the deepest secrets in the universe. It’s responsible

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