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We review the evidence behind recent claims of spatial variation in the fine structure constant deriving from observations of ionic absorption lines in the light from distant quasars. To this end we expand upon previous non-Bayesian analyses limited by the assumptions of an unbiased and strictly Normal distribution for the unexplained errors of the benchmark quasar dataset. Through the technique of reverse logistic regression we estimate and compare marginal likelihoods for three competing hypotheses---(i) the null hypothesis (no cosmic variation), (ii) the monopole hypothesis (a constant Earth-to-quasar offset), and (iii) the monopole+dipole hypothesis (a cosmic variation manifest to the Earth-bound observer as a North-South divergence)---under a variety of candidate parametric forms for the unexplained error term. Our analysis reveals weak support for a skeptical interpretation in which the apparent dipole effect is driven solely by systematic errors of opposing sign inherent in measurements from the two telescopes employed to obtain these observations. Throughout we seek to exemplify a best practice approach to Bayesian model selection with prior-sensitivity analysis; in a companion paper we extend this methodology to a semi-parametric framework using the infinite-dimensional Dirichlet process.
In the second paper of this series we extend our Bayesian reanalysis of the evidence for a cosmic variation of the fine structure constant to the semi-parametric modelling regime. By adopting a mixture of Dirichlet processes prior for the unexplained
From the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) Data Release 12, which covers the full Baryonic Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (BOSS) footprint, we investigate the possible variation of the fine-structure constant over cosmological time-scales. We analyse
The brightest southern quasar above redshift $z=1$, HE 0515$-$4414, with its strong intervening metal absorption-line system at $z_{abs}=1.1508$, provides a unique opportunity to precisely measure or limit relative variations in the fine-structure co
We study a theory in which the electromagnetic field is disformally coupled to a scalar field, in addition to a usual non-minimal electromagnetic coupling. We show that disformal couplings modify the expression for the fine-structure constant, alpha.
We propose a new method to probe for variations in the fine structure constant alpha using clusters of galaxies, opening up a window on a new redshift range for such constraints. Hot clusters shine in the X-ray mainly due to bremsstrahlung, while the