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The Equivalence Principle tests are incredibly reliable precision machines which are used to measure the Equivalence Principal to increasing sensitivity. Experimenters have redesigned the Equivalence Principle's Torsion Balance tests to try and detect the gravity variations caused by the sun, moon, and the tidal forces. It was found that the gravitational influence of the sun, moon, or the tidal forces could not be measured as manifest of the attraction of the bodies in the experiments. Variations to "gravity" did not appear.
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#REDIRECT [[Variations in Gravity]]
 
 
==The Princeton Experiment==
 
 
 
From 'The Pendulum Paradigm: Variations on a Theme and the Measure of Heaven and Earth', by Professor Martin Beech, [https://books.google.com/books?id=qumVBAAAQBAJ&lpg=PA176&ots=7zlmtFg8WI&pg=PA176#v=onepage&q&f=false we read the following] on p.176:
 
 
 
[[File:Torsion-equivelence.png|800]]
 
 
 
Essentially, the experiment is summarized as follows:
 
 
 
{{cite|In the Princeton experiment the balance arm was oriented in a North-South direction (figure 4.13), and '''the idea was to see if a difference in the Sun's gravitational influence on the suspended masses could be detected'''. Specifically, as the Earth spins on its axis and difference between '''the Sun's gravitational interaction with the two masses will result in a 24 hour modulation''' or oscillation, in the orientation of the balance arm as seen in the laboratory. '''The Princeton group found no modulation''' of the torsion balance, and concluded that the Sun's gravitational acceleration on identical aluminum and gold masses was the same to one part in one hundred billion.}}
 
 
 
The masses were not attracted to the sun in the experiment, to an accuracy of one part in one hundred billion.
 
 
 
==Repetitions==
 
 
 
Additional experiments of this class [http://202.38.64.11/~jmy/documents/publications/equivalence%20principle.htm are described]. The first experiment in this list is the Princeton experiment above:
 
 
 
{| class="wikitable"
 
! Authors
 
! Year
 
! Description
 
! Accuracy
 
|-
 
| Roll, Krotkov and Dicke
 
| 1964
 
| Torsion balance experiment, dropping aluminum and gold test masses
 
| difference is less than one part in one hundred billion
 
|-
 
| Branginsky and Panov
 
| 1971
 
| Torsion balance, aluminum and platinum test masses, measuring acceleration towards the sun
 
| difference is less than 1 part in a trillion (most accurate to date)
 
|-
 
| Eöt-Wash
 
| 1987–
 
| Torsion balance, measuring acceleration of different masses towards the earth, sun and galactic center, using several different kinds of masses
 
| difference is less than a few parts in a trillion
 
|}
 
 
 
The Eöt-Wash experiments were repeated by others:
 
 
 
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/physics-experiment/app4.html
 
 
 
{{cite|The torsion-balance experiments of Eöt-Wash were repeated by others including (Cowsik et al. 1988; Fitch, Isaila and Palmer 1988; Adelberger 1989; Bennett 1989; Newman, Graham and Nelson 1989; Stubbs et al. 1989; Cowsik et al. 1990; Nelson, Graham and Newman 1990). '''These repetitions, in different locations and using different substances, gave consistently negative results.'''}}
 
 
 
==Equivalence Principle Violation==
 
 
 
An [https://www.npl.washington.edu/eotwash/sites/sand.npl.washington.edu.eotwash/files/documents/publications/schlamminger_AAPT07.pdf Eöt-Wash presentation explains] that the influence of an external source mass would be a violation of the Equivalence Principle (EP).
 
 
 
[[File:Eot-wash-experiment.png|600px]]
 
 
 
The Equivalence Principle has never been violated. See [https://wiki.tfes.org/Evidence_for_Universal_Acceleration#University_of_Washington_Slideshow Evidence for the Universal Accelerator].
 
 
 
==History of the Torsion Balance==
 
 
 
The history of the Torsion Balance experiments began in 1889, with Barron Rosland von Eötvös' unsuccessful attempt to detect the Coriolis Force.
 
 
 
'''Foundations of Modern Cosmology'''<br>
 
By John F. Hawley, Katherine A. Holcomb
 
 
 
From [https://books.google.com/books?id=s5MUDAAAQBAJ&lpg=PA219&ots=W9HMFR84Lu&pg=PA219#v=onepage&q&f=false p.219 of the above text] we read:
 
 
 
{{cite|The first highly accurate experiment to test the equivalence principle was performed in 1889 by Barron Rosland von Eötvös. Eötvös constructed a device called a torsion balance. He suspended two bodies of nearly equal mass but different composition, from a beam which hung from a very fine wire precisely at its center. If the magnitudes of the Coriolis force (from the Earth's rotation) and the gravitational force had differed between the bodies due to their differing composition, Eötvös would have been able to detect a twisting of the wire. None was seen, and Eötvös was able to conclude that inertial and gravitational mass was equal, to approximately one part in 10^9. In the 20th century, Robert Dicke and others pushed the limit of such an experiment to 10^11, but the Baron's results were sufficient to convince many, including Einstein, that inertial mass and gravitational mass are equivalent.}}
 

Latest revision as of 22:59, 12 April 2019