Symmetry (Feb 2023)

Underground Tests of Quantum Mechanics by the VIP Collaboration at Gran Sasso

  • Fabrizio Napolitano,
  • Andrea Addazi,
  • Angelo Bassi,
  • Massimiliano Bazzi,
  • Mario Bragadireanu,
  • Michael Cargnelli,
  • Alberto Clozza,
  • Luca De Paolis,
  • Raffaele Del Grande,
  • Maaneli Derakhshani,
  • Sandro Donadi,
  • Carlo Fiorini,
  • Carlo Guaraldo,
  • Mihail Iliescu,
  • Matthias Laubenstein,
  • Simone Manti,
  • Antonino Marcianò,
  • Johann Marton,
  • Marco Miliucci,
  • Edoardo Milotti,
  • Kristian Piscicchia,
  • Alessio Porcelli,
  • Alessandro Scordo,
  • Francesco Sgaramella,
  • Diana Laura Sirghi,
  • Florin Sirghi,
  • Oton Vazquez Doce,
  • Johann Zmeskal,
  • Catalina Curceanu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/sym15020480
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 2
p. 480

Abstract

Read online

Modern physics lays its foundations on the pillars of Quantum Mechanics (QM), which has been proven successful to describe the microscopic world of atoms and particles, leading to the construction of the Standard Model. Despite the big success, the old open questions at its very heart, such as the measurement problem and the wave function collapse, are still open. Various theories consider scenarios which could encompass a departure from the predictions of the standard QM, such as extra-dimensions or deformations of the Lorentz/Poincaré symmetries. At the Italian National Gran Sasso underground Laboratory LNGS, we search for evidence of new physics proceeding from models beyond standard QM, using radiation detectors. Collapse models addressing the foundations of QM, such as the gravity-related Diósi–Penrose (DP) and Continuous Spontaneous Localization (CSL) models, predict the emission of spontaneous radiation, which allows experimental tests. Using a high-purity Germanium detector, we could exclude the natural parameterless version of the DP model and put strict bounds on the CSL one. In addition, forbidden atomic transitions could prove a possible violation of the Pauli Exclusion Principle (PEP) in open and closed systems. The VIP-2 experiment is currently in operation, aiming at detecting PEP-violating signals in Copper with electrons; the VIP-3 experiment upgrade is foreseen to become operative in the next few years. We discuss the VIP-Lead experiment on closed systems, and the strong bounds it sets on classes of non-commutative quantum gravity theories, such as the θ–Poincaré theory.

Keywords