45 research outputs found
Gravitational Theory without the Cosmological Constant Problem
We develop the principle of nongravitating vacuum energy, which is
implemented by changing the measure of integration from to an
integration in an internal space of scalar fields . As a
consequence of such a choice of the measure, the matter Lagrangian can
be changed by adding a constant while no cosmological term is induced. Here we
develop this idea to build a new theory which is formulated through the first
order formalism, i.e. using vielbein and spin connection
(a,b=1,2,...D) as independent variables. The equations
obtained from the variation of and the fields imply
the existence of a nontrivial constraint. This approach can be made consistent
with invariance under arbitrary diffeomorphisms in the internal space of scalar
fields (as well as in ordinary space-time), provided that the matter
model is chosen so as to satisfy the above mentioned constraint. If the matter
model is not chosen so as to satisfy automatically this constraint, the
diffeomorphism invariance in the internal space is broken. In this case the
constraint is dynamically implemented by the degrees of freedom that become
physical due to the breaking of the internal diffeomorphism invariance.
However, this constraint always dictates the vanishing of the cosmological
constant term and the gravitational equations in the vacuum coincide with
vacuum Einstein's equations with zero cosmological constant. The requirement
that the internal diffeomorphisms be a symmetry of the theory points towards
the unification of forces in nature like in the Kaluza-Klein scheme.Comment: 44 page