Is This the First Sign of a Weird Quantum Property of Empty Space?

01/27/2017 12:00AM

Is This the First Sign of a Weird Quantum Property of Empty Space?
By studying the light emitted from an extraordinarily dense and strongly magnetized neutron star using ESO's Very Large Telescope (VLT), astronomers may have found the first observational indications of a strange quantum effect, first predicted in the 1930s. The polarization of the observed light suggests that the empty space around the neutron star is subject to a quantum effect known as "Vacuum Birefringence."

A team led by Roberto Mignani from INAF in Milan, Italy and from the University of Zielona in Gora, Poland, used ESO's Very Large Telescope at the Paranal Observatory in Chile to observe the neutron star RX J1856.5-3754, about 400 light years from Earth. This object is part of the group of neutron stars known as the Magnificent Seven. They are known as Isolated Neutron Stars (INS), since they have no stellar companions, do not emit radio waves (like pulsars), and are not surrounded by progenitor supernova material.

Despite being one of the closest neutron stars to Earth, its extreme dimness meant the astronomers could only observe the star with visible light using the FORS2 instrument on the VLT, at the limits of current telescope technology.

Neutron stars are the very dense remnant cores of massive stars -- at least 10 times more massive than our Sun -- that have exploded as supernovae at the ends of their lives. They also have extreme magnetic fields, billions of times stronger than that of the Sun, that permeate their outer surface and surroundings.

These fields are so strong that they even affect the properties of the empty space around the star. Normally a vacuum is thought of as completely empty, and light can travel through it without being changed. But in Quantum ElectroDynamics (QED), the quantum theory describing the interaction between photons and charged particles such as electrons, space is full of virtual particles that appear and vanish all the time. Very strong magnetic fields can modify this space so that it affects the polarization of light passing through it.

Mignani explains "According to QED, a highly magnetized vacuum behaves as a prism for the propagation of light, an effect known as Vacuum Birefringence."

Among the many predictions of QED, however, Vacuum Birefringence so far lacked a direct experimental demonstration. Attempts to detect it in the laboratory have not yet succeeded in the 80 years since it was predicted by Werner Heisenberg (of Uncertainty Principle fame) and Hans Heinrich Euler.

"This effect can be detected only in the presence of enormously strong magnetic fields, such as those around neutron stars. This shows, once more, that neutron stars are invaluable laboratories in which to study the fundamental laws of nature" says Roberto Turolla, University of Padua, in Italy.

After careful analysis of the VLT data, Mignani and his team detected linear polarization at a significant degree of around 16 percent that they say is likely due to the boosting effect of Vacuum Birefringence occurring in the area of empty space surrounding RX J1856.5-3754. There are other processes that can polarize starlight as it travels through space. The team carefully reviewed other possibilities, for example polarization created by scattering off dust grains, but consider it unlikely that they produced the polarization signal observed.

Vincenzo Testa of INAF in Rome, Italy comments "This is the faintest object for which polarization has ever been measured. It required one of the largest and most efficient telescopes in the world, the VLT, and accurate data analysis techniques to enhance the signal from such a faint star."

"The high linear polarization that we measured with the VLT can't be easily explained by our models unless the Vacuum Birefringence effects predicted by QED are included," adds Mignani.

"This VLT study is the very first observational support for predictions of these kinds of QED effects arising in extremely strong magnetic fields," remarks Silvia Zane of UCL/MSSL in the UK).

Mignani is excited about further improvements to this area of study that could come about with more advanced telescopes. "Polarization measurements with the next generation of telescopes, such as ESO's European Extremely Large Telescope, could play a crucial role in testing QED predictions of Vacuum Birefringence effects around many more neutron stars."

"This measurement, made for the first time now in visible light, also paves the way to similar measurements to be carried out at X-ray wavelengths," adds Kinwah Wu of UCL/MSSL in the UK.

For more information:

http://www.eso.org/public/news/eso1641/

http://www.astromart.com/news/news.asp?news_id=1254

http://www.astromart.com/news/news.asp?news_id=1251

http://www.astromart.com/news/news.asp?news_id=1124

http://www.astromart.com/news/news.asp?news_id=725


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