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Published October 7, 2015 | Submitted + Published
Journal Article Open

Propagation peculiarities of mean field massive gravity

Abstract

Massive gravity (mGR) describes a dynamical "metric" on a fiducial, background one. We investigate fluctuations of the dynamics about mGR solutions, that is about its "mean field theory". Analyzing mean field massive gravity (mGR) propagation characteristics is not only equivalent to studying those of the full non-linear theory, but also in direct correspondence with earlier analyses of charged higher spin systems, the oldest example being the charged, massive spin 3/2 Rarita–Schwinger (RS) theory. The fiducial and mGR mean field background metrics in the mGR model correspond to the RS Minkowski metric and external EM field. The common implications in both systems are that hyperbolicity holds only in a weak background-mean-field limit, immediately ruling both theories out as fundamental theories; a situation in stark contrast with general relativity (GR) which is at least a consistent classical theory. Moreover, even though both mGR and RS theories can still in principle be considered as predictive effective models in the weak regime, their lower helicities then exhibit superluminal behavior: lower helicity gravitons are superluminal as compared to photons propagating on either the fiducial or background metric. Thus our approach has uncovered a novel, dispersive, "crystal-like" phenomenon of differing helicities having differing propagation speeds. This applies both to mGR and mGR, and is a peculiar feature that is problematic for consistent coupling to matter.

Additional Information

© 2015 Published by Elsevier B.V. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/). Funded by SCOAP3. Received 18 April 2015; Received in revised form 17 July 2015; Accepted 20 July 2015; Available online 28 July 2015. We thank C. Deffayet, S. Dubovsky, K. Hinterbichler, K. Izumi, M. Porrati and Y.C. Ong for discussions. S.D. was supported in part by grants NSF PHY-1266107 and DOE #de-sc0011632. A.W. was supported in part by a Simons Foundation Collaboration Grant for Mathematicians. G.Z. was supported in part by DOE Grant DEFG03-91ER40674. This research was supported in part by Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics. Research at Perimeter Institute is supported by the Government of Canada through Industry Canada and by the Province of Ontario through the Ministry of Economic Development & Innovation. A.W. and G.Z. thank the Perimeter Institute for an illuminating "Superluminality in Effective Field Theories for Cosmology" workshop.

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Published - 1-s2.0-S0370269315005651-main.pdf

Submitted - 1504.02919v1.pdf

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Created:
August 20, 2023
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October 23, 2023