508 research outputs found
Spontaneous Lorentz Violation and the Long-Range Gravitational Preferred-Frame Effect
Lorentz-violating operators involving Standard Model fields are tightly
constrained by experimental data. However, bounds are more model-independent
for Lorentz violation appearing in purely gravitational couplings. The
spontaneous breaking of Lorentz invariance by the vacuum expectation value of a
vector field selects a universal rest frame. This affects the propagation of
the graviton, leading to a modification of Newton's law of gravity. We compute
the size of the long-range preferred-frame effect in terms of the coefficients
of the two-derivative operators in the low-energy effective theory that
involves only the graviton and the Goldstone bosons.Comment: 11 pages, no figures, revtex4. v4: Replaced to match version to
appear in Phys. Lett. B (minor corrections of form
Relativistic Hydrodynamics with General Anomalous Charges
We consider the hydrodynamic regime of gauge theories with general triangle
anomalies, where the participating currents may be global or gauged, abelian or
non-abelian. We generalize the argument of arXiv:0906.5044, and construct at
the viscous order the stress-energy tensor, the charge currents and the entropy
current.Comment: 13 pages, Revte
Can MONDian vector theories explain the cosmic speed up ?
Generalized Einstein - Aether vector field models have been shown to provide,
in the weak field regime, modifications to gravity which can be reconciled with
the successfull MOND proposal. Very little is known, however, on the function
F(K) defining the vector field Lagrangian so that an analysis of the viability
of such theories at the cosmological scales has never been performed. As a
first step along this route, we rely on the relation between F(K) and the MOND
interpolating function to assign the vector field Lagrangian thus
obtaining what we refer to as "MONDian vector models". Since they are able by
construction to recover the MOND successes on galaxy scales, we investigate
whether they can also drive the observed accelerated expansion by fitting the
models to the Type Ia Supernovae data. Should be this the case, we have a
unified framework where both dark energy and dark matter can be seen as
different manifestations of a single vector field. It turns out that both
MONDian vector models are able to well fit the low redshift data on Type Ia
Supernovae, while some tension could be present in the high z regime.Comment: 15 pages, 5 tables, 4 figures, accepted for publication on Physical
Review
Challenging the generalized second law
The generalized second law (GSL) of black hole thermodynamics states that the
sum of changes in black hole entropy and the ordinary entropy of matter and
fields outside the hole must be non-negative. In the classical limit, the GSL
reduces to Hawking's area theorem. Neither law identifies the specific effects
which makes it work in particular situations. Motivated by Davies' recent
gedanken experiment he used to infer a bound on the size of the fine structure
constant from the GSL, we study a series of variants in which an electric test
charge is lowered to a finite radius and then dropped into a Schwarzschild, a
near-extremal magnetic Reissner-Nordstrom or a near-extremal Kerr black hole.
For a classical charge, we demonstrate that a specific "backreaction" effect is
responsible for protecting the area theorem in the near-extremal examples. For
the magnetically charged Reissner-Nordstrom hole an area theorem violation is
defused by taking into account a subtle source of repulsion of the charge: the
spinning up of the black hole in the process of bringing the charge down to its
dropping point. In Kerr hole case, the electric self-force on the charge is
sufficient to right matters. However, in all experiments involving an
elementary charge, the full GSL would apparently be violated were the fine
structure constant greater than about order unity. We argue that in this case a
quantum effect, the Unruh-Wald quantum buoyancy, may protect the GSL.Comment: 29 pages, RevTex; v2: Computational error corrected and conclusions
of Sec. III D changed, Sec. II B enlarged, and Sec. IV is new. Title and
abstract changed to reflect new results and conclusions; v3: added minor
clarifying remarks, published version; v4: updated a referenc
Cosmological evolution of interacting dark energy in Lorentz violation
The cosmological evolution of an interacting scalar field model in which the
scalar field interacts with dark matter, radiation, and baryon via Lorentz
violation is investigated. We propose a model of interaction through the
effective coupling . Using dynamical system analysis, we study the
linear dynamics of an interacting model and show that the dynamics of critical
points are completely controlled by two parameters. Some results can be
mentioned as follows. Firstly, the sequence of radiation, the dark matter, and
the scalar field dark energy exist and baryons are sub dominant. Secondly, the
model also allows the possibility of having a universe in the phantom phase
with constant potential. Thirdly, the effective gravitational constant varies
with respect to time through . In particular, we consider a simple
case where has a quadratic form and has a good agreement with the
modified CDM and quintessence models. Finally, we also calculate the
first post--Newtonian parameters for our model.Comment: 14 pages, published versio
More about spontaneous Lorentz-violation and infrared modification of gravity
We consider a model with Lorentz-violating vector field condensates, in which
dispersion laws of all perturbations, including tensor modes, undergo
non-trivial modification in the infrared. The model is free of ghosts and
tachyons at high 3-momenta. At low 3-momenta there are ghosts, and at even
lower 3-momenta there exist tachyons. Still, with appropriate choice of
parameters, the model is phenomenologically acceptable. Beyond a certain large
distance scale and even larger time scale, the gravity of a static source
changes from that of General Relativity to that of van Dam--Veltman--Zakharov
limit of the Fierz--Pauli theory. Yet the late time cosmological evolution is
always determined by the standard Friedmann equation, modulo small correction
to the ``cosmological Planck mass'', so the modification of gravity cannot by
itself explain the accelerated expansion of the Universe. We argue that the
latter property is generic in a wide class of models with condensates.Comment: 15 pages, 1 figure, JHEP3.cls; Added reference
One-Dimensional Approximation of Viscous Flows
Attention has been paid to the similarity and duality between the
Gregory-Laflamme instability of black strings and the Rayleigh-Plateau
instability of extended fluids. In this paper, we derive a set of simple
(1+1)-dimensional equations from the Navier-Stokes equations describing thin
flows of (non-relativistic and incompressible) viscous fluids. This
formulation, a generalization of the theory of drop formation by Eggers and his
collaborators, would make it possible to examine the final fate of
Rayleigh-Plateau instability, its dimensional dependence, and possible
self-similar behaviors before and after the drop formation, in the context of
fluid/gravity correspondence.Comment: 17 pages, 3 figures; v2: refs & comments adde
Anomalies in Superfluids and a Chiral Electric Effect
We analyze the chiral transport terms in relativistic superfluid
hydrodynamics. In addition to the spontaneously broken symmetry current, we
consider an arbitrary number of unbroken symmetries and extend the results of
arXiv:1105.3733. We suggest an interpretation of some of the new transport
coefficients in terms of chiral and gravitational anomalies. In particular, we
show that with unbroken gauged charges in the system, one can observe a chiral
electric conductivity - a current in a perpendicular direction to the applied
electric field. We present a motivated proposal for the value of the associated
transport coefficient, linking it to the triangle anomaly. Along the way we
present new arguments regarding the interpretation of the anomalous transport
coefficients in normal fluids. We propose a natural generalization of the
chiral transport terms to the case of an arbitrary number of spontaneously
broken symmetry currents.Comment: 30 pages; v2: Onsager-relations argument corrected, references added;
v3: fixed missing line in eq. (38
Modified Gravity via Spontaneous Symmetry Breaking
We construct effective field theories in which gravity is modified via
spontaneous breaking of local Lorentz invariance. This is a gravitational
analogue of the Higgs mechanism. These theories possess additional graviton
modes and modified dispersion relations. They are manifestly well-behaved in
the UV and free of discontinuities of the van Dam-Veltman-Zakharov type,
ensuring compatibility with standard tests of gravity. They may have important
phenomenological effects on large distance scales, offering an alternative to
dark energy. For the case in which the symmetry is broken by a vector field
with the wrong sign mass term, we identify four massless graviton modes (all
with positive-definite norm for a suitable choice of a parameter) and show the
absence of the discontinuity.Comment: 5 pages; revised versio
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