Test of Special Relativity or of the Isotropy of Space by Use of Infrared Masers

T. S. Jaseja, A. Javan, J. Murray, and C. H. Townes
Phys. Rev. 133, A1221 – Published 2 March 1964
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Abstract

The highly monochromatic frequencies of optical or infrared masers allow very sensitive detection of any change in the round-trip optical distance between two reflecting surfaces. Hence, comparison of the frequencies of two masers with axes perpendicular to each other allows an improved experiment of the Michelson-Morley type, or a very precise examination of the isotropy of space with respect to light propagation. Two He-Ne masers were mounted with axes perpendicular on a rotating table carefully isolated from acoustical vibrations. Their frequency difference was found to be constant to within 30 cps over times as short as about one second, or to one part in 1013 of the maser frequency, which is near 3×1014 cps. Rotation of the table through 90° produced repeatable variations in the frequency difference of about 275 kc/sec, presumably because of magnetostriction in the Invar spacers due to the earth's magnetic field. Examination of this variation over six consecutive hours shows that there was no relative variation in the maser frequencies associated with orientation of the earth in space greater than about 3 kc/sec. Hence there is no anisotropy or effect of either drift larger than 1/1000 of the small fractional term (vc)2 associated with the earth's orbital velocity. This preliminary version of the experiment is more precise by a factor of about 3 than previous Michelson-Morley experiments. There is reason to hope that improved versions will allow as much as 2 more orders of magnitude in precision, and that similar techniques will also yield considerably improved precision in an experiment of the Kennedy-Thorndike type.

  • Received 26 July 1963

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRev.133.A1221

©1964 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

T. S. Jaseja*, A. Javan, J. Murray, and C. H. Townes

  • Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts

  • *Present address: Indian Institute of Technology, Kanpur, India.

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Issue

Vol. 133, Iss. 5A — March 1964

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