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Fifth force sunk in ocean experiments.


After creating a splash among physicists in the mid-1980s, the hypothesized "fifth force" now appears washed up. A set of extremely accurate gravity measurements made in the Pacific Ocean shows no evidence of the extra force, confirming the results of laboratory experiments that have also failed to detect this would-be addition to the familty of four universal forces.

Scientists raised the idea of a fifth force in 1986 after finding hints that the gravity inside an Australian mine shaft did not follow Newton's inverse square law inverse square law

for a given exposure the amount of radiation falling on a given area of radiographic film varies inversely as the square of the distance of that area from the source of irradiation in the focal spot.
. They theorized that a previously unrecognized force -- acting over distances of tens to thousands of meters -- had altered the attraction between the gravity meter Noun 1. gravity meter - a measuring instrument for measuring variations in the gravitational field of the earth
gravimeter

measuring device, measuring instrument, measuring system - instrument that shows the extent or amount or quantity or degree of something
 and the rock around the shaft.

Geophysicists from the Scripps Institution of Oceanography Scripps Institution of Oceanography: see California, Univ. of.  in La Jolla, Calif., and elsewhere have now tested this hypothesis by measuring gravity while ascending in a submersible submersible, small, mobile undersea research vessel capable of functioning in the ocean depths. Development of a great variety of submersibles during the later 1950s and 1960s came about as a result of improved technology and in response to a demonstrated need for  through 5 kilometers of water off the coast of California. Carefully surveying the seafloor, the sea level and other variables, the scientists determined the gravitational constant grav·i·ta·tion·al constant
n. Abbr. G
The constant in Newton's law of gravitation that yields the attractive force between two bodies when multiplied by the product of the masses of the two bodies and divided by the square of the distance
 G to an accuracy of 2 parts in 1,000. These are the most precise gravity measurements made in large-scale field experiment, says John A. Hildebrand of Scripps.

Laboratory tests have found no sign of a fifth force but these experiments could not test for the force acting over great distances. If a fifth force did manifest itself over 1,000 meters, the recent gravity measurements near the seafloor should have differed from those several kilometers above the seafloor -- a distance presumably pre·sum·a·ble  
adj.
That can be presumed or taken for granted; reasonable as a supposition: presumable causes of the disaster.
 out of the range of the hypothetical force. But the scientists found no appreciable variation.
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Author:Monastersky, Richard
Publication:Science News
Date:Jan 4, 1992
Words:265
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