RICHARD FEYNMAN, Nobel laureate and physicist extraordinaire, called it a 
“magic number” and its value “one of the greatest damn mysteries of physics”. 
The number he was referring to, which goes by the symbol alpha and the rather 
more long-winded name of the fine-structure constant, is magic indeed. If it 
were a mere 4% bigger or smaller than it is, stars would not be able to sustain 
the nuclear reactions that synthesise carbon and oxygen. One consequence would 
be that squishy, carbon-based life would not exist. 
Why alpha takes on the precise value it has, so delicately fine-tuned for life, 
is a deep scientific mystery. A new piece of astrophysical research may, 
however, have uncovered a crucial piece of the puzzle. In a paper just 
submitted to Physical Review Letters, a team led by John Webb and Julian King 
from the University of New South Wales in Australia present evidence that the 
fine-structure constant may not actually be constant after all. Rather, it 
seems to vary from place to place within the universe. If their results hold up 
to the scrutiny, and can be replicated, they will have profound 
implications—for they suggest that the universe stretches far beyond what 
telescopes can observe, and that the laws of physics vary within it. Instead of 
the whole universe being fine-tuned for life, then, humanity finds itself in a 
corner of space where, Goldilocks-like, the values of the fundamental constants 
happen to be just right for it.
 
Slightly belying its name, the fine-structure constant is actually a compound 
of several other physical constants, whose values can be found in any physics 
textbook. You start with the square of an electron’s charge, divide it by the 
speed of light and Planck’s constant, then multiply the whole lot by two pi. 
The point of this convoluted procedure is that this combination of 
multiplication and division produces a pure, dimensionless number. The units in 
which the original measurements were made cancel each other out and the result 
is 1/137.036, regardless of the measuring system you used in the first place. 
Despite its convoluted origin, though, alpha has a real meaning. It 
characterises the strength of the force between electrically charged particles. 
As such, it governs—among other things—the energy levels of an atom formed from 
negatively charged electrons and a positive nucleus. When electrons jump 
between these energy levels, they absorb and emit light of particular 
frequencies. These frequencies show up as lines (dark for absorption; bright 
for emission) in a spectrum. When many different energy levels are involved, as 
they are in the spectrum of a chemically mixed star, the result is a fine, 
comb-like structure—hence the constant’s name. If it were to take on a 
different value, the wavelengths of these lines would change. And that is what 
Dr Webb and Mr King think they have found.
The light in question comes not from individual stars but from quasars. These 
are extremely luminous (and distant) galaxies whose energy output is powered by 
massive black holes at their centres. As light from a quasar travels through 
space, it passes through clouds of gas that imprint absorption lines onto its 
spectrum. By measuring the wavelengths of a large collection of these 
absorption lines and subtracting the effects of the expansion of the universe, 
the team led by Dr Webb and Mr King was able to measure the value of alpha in 
places billions of light-years away. 
Dr Webb first conducted such a study almost a decade ago, using 76 quasars 
observed with the Keck telescope in Hawaii. He found that, the farther out he 
looked, the smaller alpha seemed to be. In astronomy, of course, looking 
farther away means looking further back in time. The data therefore indicated 
that alpha was around 0.0006% smaller 9 billion years ago than it is now. That 
may sound trivial. But any detectable deviation from zero would mean that the 
laws of physics were different there (and then) from those that pertain in the 
neighbourhood of the Earth.
Such an important result needed independent verification using a different 
telescope, so in 2004 another group of researchers looked from the European 
Southern Observatory’s Very Large Telescope (VLT) in Chile. They found no 
evidence for any variation of alpha. Since then, though, flaws have been 
discovered in that second analysis, so Dr Webb and his team set out to do their 
own crosscheck with a sample of 60 quasars observed by the VLT.
What they found shocked them. The further back they looked with the VLT, the 
larger alpha seemed to be—in seeming contradiction to the result they had 
obtained with the Keck. They realised, however, that there was a crucial 
difference between the two telescopes: because they are in different 
hemispheres, they are pointing in opposite directions. Alpha, therefore, is not 
changing with time; it is varying through space. When they analysed the data 
from both telescopes in this way, they found a great arc across the sky. Along 
this arc, the value of alpha changes smoothly, being smaller in one direction 
and larger in the other. The researchers calculate that there is less than a 1% 
chance such an effect could arise at random. Furthermore, six of the quasars 
were observed with both telescopes, allowing them to get an additional handle 
on their errors.
If the fine-structure constant really does vary through space, it may provide a 
way of studying the elusive “higher dimensions” that many theories of reality 
predict, but which are beyond the reach of particle accelerators on Earth. In 
these theories, the constants observed in the three-dimensional world are 
reflections of what happens in higher dimensions. It is natural in these 
theories for such constants to change their values as the universe expands and 
evolves. 
Unfortunately, their method does not allow the team to tell which of the 
constants that goes into alpha might be changing. But it suggests that at least 
one of them is. On the other hand, the small value of the change over a 
distance of 18 billion light-years suggests the whole universe is vastly bigger 
than had previously been suspected. A diameter of 18 billion light-years (9 
billion in each direction) is a considerable percentage of observable reality. 
The universe being 13.7 billion years old, 13.7 billion light-years—duly 
stretched to allow for the expansion of the universe—is the maximum distance it 
is possible to see in any direction. If the variation Dr Webb and Mr King have 
found is real, and as gradual as their data suggest, you would have to go a 
very long way indeed to come to a bit of space where the fine-structure 
constant was more than 4% different from its value on Earth.
If. Other teams of astronomers are already on the case, and Victor Flambaum, 
one of Dr Webb’s colleagues at the University of New South Wales, points out in 
a companion paper that laboratory tests involving atomic clocks only slightly 
better than those that exist already could provide an independent check. These 
would vary as the solar system moves through the universe. But if and when such 
confirmation comes, it will break one of physics’s greatest taboos, the 
assumption that physical laws are the same everywhere and everywhen. And the 
fine-structure constant will have shown itself to be more mysterious than even 
Feynman conceived.
 


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