An experiment to confirm that gravity is a boson-mediated force.
The
Standard Model of particle physics has been, in terms of experimental verification, arguably the most successful significant scientific theory in history.
Yet, the “standard” Standard Model describes only 3 of the 4 fundamental forces – the electromagnetic, the strong nuclear, and the weak nuclear. Attempts to include the 4th force – gravity – have been troubled, failing to gain widespread acceptance of the proposed boson known as the graviton. This omission severely limits the formalism available for branches of Physics like cosmology, and generally leaves science professionals and amateurs with a sense of unease.
In
a post to the “Speed of light is limited by what?” thread, Southtown suggested that a
light clock is a faulty design for a clock for measuring
time dilation, but that an analog wrist watch might not be.
My initial reaction to this was to point out that an analog wrist watch
is as much a light clock as the kind to which the term normally refers. According to the Standard Model, all of the forces involved in the movement of a spring-driven, analog wrist watch result from interactions of bosons, primarily photons of magnetic force between electrons and the quarks that compose protons and electrons in its atoms, and between the electrons in the atomic lattices that comprise the macroscopic parts of the watch. The light clock thought experiment applies as much to this much more complicated arrangement as to the usual, simplified one.
It then occurred to me that there is a kind of clock that’s movement does not, according to the “standard” Standard Model, involve boson interaction: A pendulum clock, which, in addition to the usual bosons, depends on the gravitational force.
I wonder – is it possible, in principle if not within the limits of practical experimental precision, to falsify the hypothesis that the gravitational force is due to the graviton, by detecting that the gravitational force producing a pendulum clock’s movement does not exhibit relativistic time dilation?
PS: I seem to have posted this thread in the wrong forum. It should be in "Physics and Mathematics"