Theses and Dissertations from UMD

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New submissions to the thesis/dissertation collections are added automatically as they are received from the Graduate School. Currently, the Graduate School deposits all theses and dissertations from a given semester after the official graduation date. This means that there may be up to a 4 month delay in the appearance of a give thesis/dissertation in DRUM

More information is available at Theses and Dissertations at University of Maryland Libraries.

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    Cryogenic test of gravitational inverse square law below 100-micrometer length scales
    (2010) Yethadka Venkateswara, Krishna Raj; Paik, Ho Jung; Physics; Digital Repository at the University of Maryland; University of Maryland (College Park, Md.)
    The inverse-square law is a hallmark of theories of gravity, impressively demonstrated from astronomical scales to sub-millimeter scales, yet we do not have a complete quantized theory of gravity applicable at the shortest distance scale. Problems within modern physics such as the hierarchy problem, the cosmological constant problem, and the strong CP problem in the Standard Model motivate a search for new physics. Theories such as large extra dimensions, ‘fat gravitons,’ and the axion, proposed to solve these problems, can result in a deviation from the gravitational inverse-square law below 100 μm and are thus testable in the laboratory. We have conducted a sub-millimeter test of the inverse-square law at 4.2 K. To minimize Newtonian errors, the experiment employed a near-null source, a disk of large diameter-to-thickness ratio. Two test masses, also disk-shaped, were positioned on the two sides of the source mass at a nominal distance of 280 μm. As the source was driven sinusoidally, the response of the test masses was sensed through a superconducting differential accelerometer. Any deviations from the inverse-square law would appear as a violation signal at the second harmonic of the source frequency, due to symmetry. We improved the design of the experiment significantly over an earlier version, by separating the source mass suspension from the detector housing and making the detector a true differential accelerometer. We identified the residual gas pressure as an error source, and developed ways to overcome the problem. During the experiment we further identified the two dominant sources of error - magnetic cross-talk and electrostatic coupling. Using cross-talk cancellation and residual balance, these were reduced to the level of the limiting random noise. No deviations from the inverse-square law were found within the experimental error (2σ) down to a length scale λ = 100 μm at the level of coupling constant |α|≤2. Extra dimensions were searched down to a length scale of 78 μm (|α|≤4). We have also proposed modifications to the current experimental design in the form of new tantalum source mass and installing additional accelerometers, to achieve an amplifier noise limited sensitivity.
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    Submillimeter Test of the Gravitational Inverse-Square Law Using a Superconducting Differential Accelerometer
    (2007-11-21) Prieto, Violeta A; Paik, Ho Jung; Physics; Digital Repository at the University of Maryland; University of Maryland (College Park, Md.)
    The inverse-square law of gravitation is tested at submillimeter distances. To minimize Newtonian errors, the experiment employs a near null source, a circular disk of large diameter-to-thickness ratio. Two test masses, also disk-shaped, are suspended on the two sides of the source mass at a nominal distance of 180 micrometers. The source mass amplitude of motion is 16.1 micrometers. The signal is detected by a superconducting differential accelerometer. Careful matching and alignment makes the detector highly immune to platform vibrations. To reduce the thermal Brownian motion noise as well as the temperature noise of the instrument, the experiment is cooled to 1.7 K by pumping on liquid helium. In this dissertation, I discuss the assembly, design, and design improvements of the inverse square law experiment. I perform a comprehensive analysis of the errors, identify the problems with the apparatus, and show ways to improve the design of the experiment. With the improved design, it will be possible to achieve a sensitivity of |alpha| = 2 x 10^-3 at lambda = 150 micrometers, which will improve the current experimental limits by one order of magnitude at 150 micrometers and by over two orders of magnitude at shorter distances.