Fine-structure constant

Fine-structure constant

The fine-structure constant or Sommerfeld fine-structure constant, usually denoted alpha ,, is the fundamental physical constant characterizing the strength of the electromagnetic interaction.It is a dimensionless quantity, and thus its numerical value is independent of the system of units used.

The best value currently is:

: alpha = frac{e^2}{hbar c 4 pi epsilon_0} = frac{e^2 c mu_0}{2 h} = 7.297,352,570(5) imes 10^{-3} = frac{1}{137.035,999,070(98)} .

(numbers within parentheses are uncertainties), where e , is the elementary charge, hbar = h/(2 pi) , is the reduced Planck constant, c , is the speed of light in a vacuum, epsilon_0 , is the vacuum permittivity, and mu_0 , is the magnetic constant or vacuum permeability, a defined conversion factor.

The defining expression and the value recommended by 2006 CODATA as reported by [http://physics.nist.gov/cgi-bin/cuu/Value?alph NIST reference on constants, units, and uncertainty] is:

: alpha = frac{e^2}{hbar c 4 pi epsilon_0} = 7.297,352,5376(50) imes 10^{-3} = frac{1}{137.035,999,679(94)} .

However, after completion of the 2006 CODATA adjustment an error was discovered in one of the input data, leading to the first value given above.

The name of the fine-structure constant refers to its earliest use in the theory for the fine structure of atomic energy spectra. However, its modern use is far from being as specialized as its name suggests.

Related definitions

The fine-structure constant can also be defined as

: alpha = frac{k_e e^2}{hbar c} = frac{e^2}{2 epsilon_0 h c}

where k_e , is the electrostatic constant, e , is the elementary charge, hbar = h/(2 pi) , is the reduced Planck constant, c , is the speed of light in a vacuum, and epsilon_0 , is the electric constant.

In electrostatic cgs units, the unit of electric charge (the "Statcoulomb" or "esu of charge") is defined in such a way that the permittivity factor, 4 pi epsilon_0 ,, is the dimensionless constant 1. Then the fine-structure constant becomes

: alpha = frac{e^2}{hbar c} .

Measurement

The definition of alpha, contains several other constants which can be measured themselves.However, quantum electrodynamics (QED) provides a way to measure alpha, directlyusing the quantum Hall effect or the anomalous magnetic moment of the electron.

QED predicts a relationship between the dimensionless magnetic moment of the electron (or the Lande g-factor, g ,) and the fine structure constant alpha,. A new measurement of g , using a one-electron quantum cyclotron, together with a QED calculation involving 891 four-loop Feynman diagrams, determines the most precise current value of alpha,:Citation
url=http://hussle.harvard.edu/~gabrielse/gabrielse/papers/2006/NewFineStructureConstant.pdf
author1=G. Gabrielse
author2=D. Hanneke
author3=T. Kinoshita
author4=M. Nio
author5=B. Odom
title=New Determination of the Fine Structure Constant from the Electron g Value and QED
journal=Phys. Rev. Lett.
volume=97
issue=030802
date=2006-07-21
year=2006
doi=10.1103/PhysRevLett.97.030802
author=Gabrielse, G.
pages=030802
and Citation
url=http://hussle.harvard.edu/~gabrielse/gabrielse/papers/2006/NewFineStructureConstant.pdf
author1=G. Gabrielse
author2=D. Hanneke
author3=T. Kinoshita
author4=M. Nio
author5=B. Odom
title=Erratum: New Determination of the Fine Structure Constant from the Electron g Value and QED Phys. Rev. Lett. 97, 030802 (2006)
journal=Phys. Rev. Lett.
volume=99
issue=039902
date=2007-06-24
year=2007
doi=10.1103/PhysRevLett.99.039902
author=Gabrielse, G.
pages=039902
]

: alpha^{-1} = 137.035,999,068(96)

i.e., a measurement with a precision of 0.70 ppb. The uncertainties are 10 times smaller than those of the nearest rival methods that include atom-recoil measurements. Comparisons of the measured and calculated values of g , test QED very stringently, and set a limit on any possible internal structure of the electron.

Physical interpretation

There are several ways to interpret the reality of the Fine-structure constant, including:
# the square of the ratio of the elementary to Planck charges
# a ratio of certain energies
# the ratio between the electron velocity in Bohr's model of the atom and the speed of light
# a constant representing the strength of the interaction between electrons and photons
# the strength of the electromagnetic interaction, which may change, depending on the strength of the energy field. The fine-structure constant can be thought of as the square of the ratio of the elementary charge to the Planck charge.

: alpha = left( frac{e}{q_P} ight)^2.

For any arbitrary length s ,, the fine-structure constant is the ratio of two energies: (i) the energy needed to bring two electrons from infinity to a distance of s , against their electrostatic repulsion, and (ii) the energy of a single photon of wavelength equal to the same length scaled by 2π (i.e. 2 pi s = lambda = frac{c}{ u} , where u , is the frequency of radiation associated with the photon):

: alpha = frac{e^2}{4 pi epsilon_0 s} div h u = frac{e^2}{4 pi epsilon_0 s} div frac{h c}{2 pi s} = frac{e^2}{4 pi epsilon_0 hbar c}.

The fine structure constant is also the ratio between the electron velocity in the Bohr atom and the speed of light. The square of alpha is the ratio between the electron rest mass (511 keV) and the Hartree energy (27.2 eV = 2 Ry).

In the theory of quantum electrodynamics, the fine structure constant plays the role of a coupling constant, representing the strength of the interaction between electrons and photons. Its value cannot be predicted by the theory, and has to be inserted based on experimental results. In fact, it is one of the twenty-odd "external parameters" in the Standard Model of particle physics.

The fact that alpha , is much less than 1 allows the use of perturbation theory in quantum electrodynamics. Physical results in this theory are expressed as power series in alpha ,, with higher orders of alpha , increasingly unimportant. In contrast, the large value of the corresponding factors in quantum chromodynamics makes calculations involving the strong force extremely difficult.

In the electroweak theory, one that unifies the weak interaction with electromagnetism, the fine-structure constant is absorbed into two other coupling constants associated with the electroweak gauge fields. In this theory, the electromagnetic interaction is treated as a mixture of interactions associated with the electroweak fields.

According to the theory of renormalization group, the value of the fine-structure constant (the strength of the electromagnetic interaction) depends on the energy scale. In fact, it grows logarithmically as the energy is increased. The observed value of alpha , is associated with the energy scale of the electron mass; the energy scale does not run below this because the electron (and the positron) is the lightest charged object whose quantum loops can contribute to the running. Therefore, we can say that 1/137.036 is the value of the fine-structure constant at zero energy. Moreover, as the energy scale increases, the electromagnetic interaction approaches the strength of the other two interactions, which is important for the theories of grand unification. If quantum electrodynamics were an exact theory, the fine-structure constant would actually diverge at an energy known as the Landau pole. This fact makes quantum electrodynamics inconsistent beyond the perturbative expansions.

History

The fine-structure constant was originally introduced into physics in 1916 by Arnold Sommerfeld, as a measure of the relativistic deviations in atomic spectral lines from the predictions of the Bohr model.

Historically, the first physical interpretation of the fine-structure constant, alpha ,, was the ratio of the velocity of the electron in the first circular orbit of the relativistic Bohr atom to the speed of light in vacuum. Equivalently, it was the quotient between the maximum angular momentum allowed by relativity for a closed orbit and the minimum angular momentum allowed for it by quantum mechanics. It appears naturally in Sommerfeld's analysis and determines the size of the splitting or fine-structure of the hydrogenic spectral lines.

Is the fine structure constant really constant?

Physicists have been wondering for many years whether the fine structure constant is really a constant, i.e., whether or not its value is different at different times or in different places. Historically, a varying alpha , has been proposed as a means to solve some of the perceived cosmological problems of the day. [cite book
last=Milne
first=Edward Arthur
authorlink=Arthur Milne
title = Relativity, Gravitation and World Structure
publisher = The Clarendon press
date = 1935
location = Oxford
] [P. A. M. Dirac, Nature 139, 323(1937)] [G. Gamow, Phys. Rev. Lett. 19, 757 and 913 (1967).] More recently, theoretical interest in varying constants (not just alpha ,) has been motivated by string theory and other such proposals for going beyond the Standard Model of particle physics. The first experimental tests of this question, most notably examination of spectral lines of distant astronomical objects and of radioactive decays in the Oklo natural nuclear fission reactor, found results consistent with no change. [cite journal
last = Uzan
first = Jean-Philippe
authorlink = Jean-Philippe Uzan
title = The fundamental constants and their variation: observational status and theoretical motivations
journal = Reviews of Modern Physics
volume = 75
pages = 403–455
publisher = American Physical Society
date = 2003
url = http://arxiv.org/abs/hep-ph/0205340
accessdate = 2006-08-12
doi = 10.1103/RevModPhys.75.403
] [cite journal
last = Uzan
first = Jean-Philippe
authorlink = Jean-Philippe Uzan
title = Variation of the constants in the late and early universe
journal = astro-ph/0409424
publisher = arXiv
date = 2004
url = http://arxiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0409424
accessdate = 2006-08-12
] [cite journal
last = Olive
first = Keith
authorlink = Keith Olive
coauthors = Qian, Yong-Zhong
title = Were Fundamental Constants Different in the Past?
journal = Physics Today
volume = 57
issue = 10
pages = 40–5
publisher = American Institute of Physics
date = 2003
doi = 10.1063/1.1825267
] [cite book
last = Barrow
first = John D.
authorlink = John D. Barrow
title = The Constants of Nature: From Alpha to Omega--the Numbers That Encode the Deepest Secrets of the Universe
publisher = Vintage
date = 2002
location = London
id = ISBN 0-09-928647-5
] [cite book
last = Uzan
first = Jean-Philippe
authorlink = Jean-Philippe Uzan
coauthors = Bénédicte Leclercq
title = The natural laws of the universe - Understanding fundamentral constants
publisher = Springer Praxis
date = 2008
location = Berlin Heidelberg New-York
id = ISBN 978-0-387-73454-5
] [cite book
last = Fujii
first = Yasunori
title = Astrophysics, Clocks and Fundamental Constants
chapter = Oklo Constraint on the Time-Variability of the Fine-Structure Constant
pages = 167-185
chapterurl = http://www.springerlink.com/content/20dt5p8t8ene319q/
url = http://www.springerlink.com/content/yvjtrlw7grcn/
publisher = Springer Berlin
isbn = 978-3-540-21967-5
date = 2004
series = Lecture Notes in Physics
location = Heidelberg
]

More recently, technology improvements have made it possible to probe the value of alpha , at much larger distances and to much greater accuracy. In 1999, a team lead by John K. Webb of the University of New South Wales claimed the first detection of a variation in alpha ,. [cite journal
last = Webb
first = John K.
authorlink = John K. Webb
coauthors = et al
title = Search for Time Variation of the Fine Structure Constant
journal = Physical Review Letters
volume = 82
issue = 5
pages = 884–887
publisher = American Physical Society
date = 1999
url = http://arxiv.org/pdf/astro-ph/9803165
accessdate = 2006-08-12
doi = 10.1103/PhysRevLett.82.884
] [M. T. Murphy et al, Mon. Not. Roy. Astron. Soc. 327, 1208 (2001)] [cite journal
last = Webb
first = John K.
authorlink = John K. Webb
coauthors = et al
title = Further Evidence for Cosmological Evolution of the Fine Structure Constant
journal = Physical Review Letters
volume = 87
issue = 9
pages = 091301
publisher = American Physical Society
date = 2001
url = http://arxiv.org/pdf/astro-ph/0012539
accessdate = 2006-08-12
doi = 10.1103/PhysRevLett.87.091301
] [M.T. Murphy, J.K. Webb and V.V. Flambaum, Mon. Not R. astron. Soc. 345, 609 (2003)] Using the Keck telescopes and a data set of 128 quasars at
redshifts 0.5alpha , over the last 10-12 billion years. Specifically, they found that

:frac{Delta alpha}{alpha} stackrel{mathrm{def{=} frac{alpha _mathrm{then}-alpha _mathrm{now{alpha_mathrm{now = left( -0.57pm 0.10 ight) imes 10^{-5}.

A more recent, smaller, study of 23 absorption systems by Chand et al. using the Very Large Telescope found nomeasureable variation: [H. Chand et al., Astron. Astrophys. 417, 853 (2004)] [R. Srianand et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 92, 121302 (2004).]

: frac{Delta alpha}{alpha_mathrm{em= left(-0.6pm 0.6 ight) imes 10^{-6}. The Chand et al. result apparently rules out variation at the level claimed by Webb et al., although there are still concerns about systematic uncertainties. Surveys to provide additional data are ongoing. All other astrophysical results to date are consistent with no variation. [cite journal
last = Barrow
first = John D.
authorlink = John D. Barrow
title = Varying Constants
journal = Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society
volume = 363
pages = 2139–2153
publisher = Royal Society
date = 2005
url = http://arxiv.org/pdf/astro-ph/0511440
accessdate = 2006-08-12
]

Very recently, Khatri and Wandelt of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaignrealized that the 21 cm hyperfine transition in neutral hydrogen in the early Universe leaves a unique absorption line imprint in the cosmic microwave background radiation. [Citation
last1 = Khatri
first1 = Rishi
last2 = Wandelt
first2 = Benjamin D.
author2-link = Benjamin D. Wandelt
title = 21-cm Radiation: A New Probe of Variation in the Fine-Structure Constant
journal = Physical Review Letters
volume = 98
pages = 111301
publisher = American Physical Society
date = 2007
url = http://arxiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0701752
accessdate = 2007-07-09
doi = 10.1103/PhysRevLett.98.111301
] They proposed using this effect to measure the value of alpha during the epoch before the formation of the first stars. In principle, this technique provides enough information to measure a variation of 1 part in 10^{9} (4 orders of magnitude better than the current quasar constraints). However, the constraint which can be placed on alpha is strongly dependent upon effective integration time, going as t^{-1/2}. The LOFAR telescope would only be able to constrain Deltaalpha/alpha to ~0.3% [Citation
last1 = Khatri
first1 = Rishi
last2 = Wandelt
first2 = Benjamin D.
author2-link = Benjamin D. Wandelt
title = 21-cm Radiation: A New Probe of Variation in the Fine-Structure Constant
journal = Physical Review Letters
volume = 98
pages = 111301
publisher = American Physical Society
date = 2007
url = http://arxiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0701752
accessdate = 2007-07-09
doi = 10.1103/PhysRevLett.98.111301
] . The collecting area required to constrain Deltaalpha/alpha to the current level of quasar constraints is on the order of 100km^2, which is impracticable at present.

Anthropic explanation

One controversial explanation of the value of the fine-structure constant invokes the anthropic principle and argues that the value of the fine-structure is what it is because stable matter and therefore life and intelligent beings could not exist if the value were anything else. For instance, were alpha, to change by 4%, carbon would no longer be produced in stellar fusion. If alpha, were greater than 0.1, fusion would no longer occur in stars. [cite journal
last = Barrow
first = John D.
authorlink = John D. Barrow
title = [http://www.blackwell-synergy.com/doi/pdf/10.1111/j.1749-6632.2001.tb02133.x Cosmology, Life, and the Anthropic Principle]
journal = Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences
volume = 950
issue = 1
pages = 139–153
date = 2001
doi = 10.1111/j.1749-6632.2001.tb02133.x
doi_brokendate = 2008-06-25
]

The fine structure constant plays a central role in John Barrow and Frank Tipler's broad-ranging discussion of astrophysics, cosmology, quantum physics, teleology, and the anthropic principle. [John D. Barrow and Frank J. Tipler, 1986. "The Anthropic Cosmological Principle". Oxford University Press.]

Numerological explanations

As a dimensionless constant which does not seem to be directly related to any mathematical constant, the fine-structure constant has long been an object of fascination to physicists. Richard Feynman, one of the founders of quantum electrodynamics, referred to it as "one of the greatest damn mysteries of physics: a magic number that comes to us with no understanding by man." [cite book|first=Richard P.|last=Feynman|authorlink=Richard Feynman|title=
year=1985|publisher=Princeton University Press|id=ISBN 0-691-08388-6|pages=129
]

In 1929, Arthur Eddington conjectured that its reciprocal was precisely the integer 137, constructed numerological arguments that the value could be "obtained by pure deduction", and related it to the Eddington number, his estimate of the number of protons in the Universe. Other physicists neither adopted this conjecture nor accepted his arguments, and by the 1940s, experimental values for frac|1|α deviated sufficiently from 137 to reject that value. [Helge Kragh, "Magic Number: A Partial History of the Fine-Structure Constant", "Archive for History of Exact Sciences" 57:5:395 (July, 2003) doi|10.1007/s00407-002-0065-7]

Recently the mathematician [http://www.maths.qmul.ac.uk/~jgg/ James Gilson] has suggested [http://www.fine-structure-constant.org/] that the fine-structure constant has the value:

: alpha = frac{cos left(pi/137 ight)}{137} frac{ an left(pi/(137 cdot 29) ight)}{pi/(137 cdot 29)} approx frac{1}{137.0359997867} ,

29 and 137 being the 10th and 33rd prime numbers. This deviates from the 2006 CODATA value for α by about one standard uncertainty of measurement, but by more than seven standard deviations from the best α value currently known (2007).

Quotes

* "It has been a mystery ever since it was discovered more than fifty years ago, and all good theoretical physicists put this number up on their wall and worry about it. Immediately you would like to know where this number for a coupling comes from: is it related to π or perhaps to the base of natural logarithms? Nobody knows. It's one of the greatest damn mysteries of physics: a magic number that comes to us with no understanding by man. You might say the "hand of God" wrote that number, and "we don't know how He pushed his pencil." We know what kind of a dance to do experimentally to measure this number very accurately, but we don't know what kind of dance to do on the computer to make this number come out, without putting it in secretly!" — Richard P. Feynman, "QED: The Strange Theory of Light and Matter", Princeton University Press 1985, p. 129.
* "The mystery about alpha, is actually a double mystery. The first mystery -- the origin of its numerical value alpha, ~ 1/137 -- has been recognized and discussed for decades. The second mystery -- the range of its domain --is generally unrecognized." -- Malcolm H. Mac Gregor, "The Power of alpha, " Singapore: World Scientific Publishing Company, 2007, p. 69Citation |isbn = 9789812569615 .

See also

*Coupling constants
*Fundamental physical constant

External links

*" [http://physics.nist.gov/cuu/Constants/alpha.html Introduction to the constants for nonexperts,] " adapted from the "Encyclopedia Britannica", 15th ed. Disseminated by the NIST web page.
* [http://physics.nist.gov/cuu/Constants/codata.pdf CODATA recommended value of α,] as of 2006.
*" [http://scienceworld.wolfram.com/physics/FineStructureConstant.html Fine structure constant,] " Eric Weisstein's World of Physics website.
*John D. Barrow, and Webb, John K., " [http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?articleID=0005BFE6-2965-128A-A96583414B7F0000&ref=sciam Inconstant Constants,] " "Scientific American", May 2005.

References


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужна курсовая?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • fine structure constant — smulkiosios sandaros konstanta statusas T sritis Standartizacija ir metrologija apibrėžtis Apibrėžtį žr. priede. priedas( ai) Grafinis formatas atitikmenys: angl. fine structure constant vok. Feinstrukturkonstante, f rus. константа тонкой… …   Penkiakalbis aiškinamasis metrologijos terminų žodynas

  • fine structure constant — smulkiosios sandaros konstanta statusas T sritis fizika atitikmenys: angl. fine structure constant vok. Feinstrukturkonstante, f rus. постоянная тонкой структуры, f pranc. constante de la structure fine, f …   Fizikos terminų žodynas

  • fine-structure constant — A dimensionless constant, equal to 7.297351 x 10 3 (approximately 1/137), given by 2π times the square of the electron charge, divided by the product of the speed of light and Planck s constant …   Dictionary of automotive terms

  • fine-structure constant — noun The fundamental physical value α, presumed to be constant, that characterizes the strength of the electromagnetic force …   Wiktionary

  • fine-structure constant — ¦ ̷ ̷ ˈ ̷ ̷  ̷ ̷ noun : a dimensionless constant that is a measure of the strength of electromagnetic interactions of subatomic particles and that has an approximate value of 0.0073 or 1/137 symbol α …   Useful english dictionary

  • fine structure — /fuyn/, Physics. a group of lines that are observed in the spectra of certain elements, as hydrogen, and that are caused by various couplings of the azimuthal quantum number and the angular momentum quantum number. Cf. hyperfine structure. [1915… …   Universalium

  • Fine structure — Interference fringes, showing fine structure (splitting) of a cooled deuterium source, viewed through a Fabry Pérot étalon. In atomic physics, the fine structure describes the splitting of the spectral lines of atoms due to first order… …   Wikipedia

  • Dimensionless physical constant — In physics, a dimensionless physical constant (sometimes fundamental physical constant) is a universal physical constant that is dimensionless having no unit attached, so its numerical value is the same under all possible systems of units. The… …   Wikipedia

  • Constante de structure fine — En physique, la constante de structure fine, représentée par la lettre grecque α, est une constante fondamentale qui régit la force électromagnétique assurant la cohérence des atomes et des molécules. Elle fut proposée en 1916 par le physicien… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Constante De Structure Fine — Cet article fait partie de la série Mécanique quantique Postulats de la mécanique quantique Histo …   Wikipédia en Français

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”