644 research outputs found

    Non-Singular Black Holes in Massive Gravity: Time-Dependent Solutions

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    When starting with a static, spherically-symmetric ansatz, there are two types of black hole solutions in dRGT massive gravity: (i) exact Schwarzschild solutions which exhibit no Yukawa suppression at large distances and (ii) solutions in which the dynamical metric and the reference metric are simultaneously diagonal and which inevitably exhibit coordinate-invariant singularities at the horizon. In this work we investigate the possibility of black hole solutions which can accommodate both a non-singular horizon and Yukawa asymptotics. In particular, by adopting a time-dependent ansatz, we derive perturbative analytic solutions which possess non-singular horizons. These black hole solutions are indistinguishable from Schwarzschild black holes in the limit of zero graviton mass. At finite graviton mass, they depend explicitly on time. However, we demonstrate that the location of the apparent horizon is not necessarily time-dependent, indicating that these black holes are not necessarily accreting or evaporating (classically). In deriving these results, we also review and extend known results about static black hole solutions in massive gravity.Comment: 19 pages, 2 figure

    Massive Spin-2 Scattering and Asymptotic Superluminality

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    We place model-independent constraints on theories of massive spin-2 particles by considering the positivity of the phase shift in eikonal scattering. The phase shift is an asymptotic SS-matrix observable, related to the time delay/advance experienced by a particle during scattering. Demanding the absence of a time advance leads to constraints on the cubic vertices present in the theory. We find that, in theories with massive spin-2 particles, requiring no time advance means that either: (i) the cubic vertices must appear as a particular linear combination of the Einstein-Hilbert cubic vertex and an hμν3h_{\mu\nu}^3 potential term or (ii) new degrees of freedom or strong coupling must enter at parametrically the mass of the massive spin-2 field. These conclusions have implications for a variety of situations. Applied to theories of large-NN QCD, this indicates that any spectrum with an isolated massive spin-2 at the bottom must have these particular cubic self-couplings. Applied to de Rham-Gabadadze-Tolley massive gravity, the constraint is in accord with and generalizes previous results obtained from a shockwave calculation: of the two free dimensionless parameters in the theory there is a one parameter line consistent with a subluminal phase shift.Comment: 46 pages, 1 figure. v2: Minor corrections. v3: Minor edits; orthogonalized \oplus tensor polarizations. Results are unaffecte
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