Space.com is not the right place to read about fundamental physics, but nonetheless I just saw Pioneering gravity research snags $3 million physics Breakthrough Prize which says:
Measurements by Adelberger, Gundlach, Heckel and their colleagues recently showed that the inverse square law holds even for objects separated by a mere 52 microns (0.002 inches), "establishing that any extra dimension must be curled up with a radius less than 1/3 the diameter of a human hair," Breakthrough Prize representatives wrote in today's award announcement.
The abstract of the linked arXiv preprint says:
We tested the gravitational 1/r2 law using a stationary torsion-balance detector and a rotating attractor containing test bodies with both 18-fold and 120-fold azimuthal symmetries that simultaneously tests the 1/r2 law at two different length scales. We took data at detector-attractor separations between 52 µm and 3.0 mm. Newtonian gravity gave an excellent fit to our data, limiting with 95% confidence any gravitational-strength Yukawa interactions to ranges < 38.6 µm.
To push the range below 100 microns it's clear that they didn't build a 100 micron wide torsional pendulum, but instead did something to the shape of a larger pendulum.
Question: Is it possible to explain in a simple and straightforward way how the apparatus was able to explore deviations from 1/r2 at distances below 100 microns using larger attractors and pendulums and putting holes in them?