FINITE-RANGE GRAVITY AND ITS ROLE IN GRAVITATIONAL WAVES, BLACK HOLES AND COSMOLOGY
- 1 December 2003
- journal article
- Published by World Scientific Pub Co Pte Ltd in International Journal of Modern Physics D
- Vol. 12 (10) , 1905-1959
- https://doi.org/10.1142/s0218271803004250
Abstract
Theoretical considerations of fundamental physics, as well as certain cosmological observations, persistently point out to permissibility, and maybe necessity, of macroscopic modifications of the Einstein general relativity. The field theoretical formulation of general relativity helped us to identify the phenomenological seeds of such modifications. They take place in the form of very specific mass terms, which appear in addition to the field theoretical analog of the usual Hilbert–Einstein Lagrangian. We derive and study exact nonlinear equations of the theory, along with its linear approximation. We interpret the added terms as masses of spin-2 and spin-0 gravitons. The arising finite-range gravity is a fully consistent theory, which smoothly approaches general relativity in the massless limit, that is, when both masses tend to zero and the range of gravity tends to infinity. We show that all local weak-field predictions of the theory are in perfect agreement with the available experimental data. However, some other conclusions of the nonlinear massive theory are in a striking contrast with those of general relativity. We show in detail how the arbitrarily small mass terms eliminate the black hole event horizon and replace a permanent power-law expansion of a homogeneous isotropic universe with an oscillatory behaviour. One variant of the theory allows the cosmological scale factor to exhibit an 'accelerated expansion' instead of slowing down to a regular maximum of expansion. We show in detail why the traditional, Fierz–Pauli, massive gravity is in conflict not only with the static-field experiments, but also with the available indirect gravitational-wave observations. At the same time, we demonstrate the incorrectness of the widely held belief that the non-Fierz–Pauli theories possess "negative energies" and "instabilities."Keywords
All Related Versions
This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- To the problem of nonvanishing gravitation massPublished by Elsevier ,2002
- Mass for the GravitonGeneral Relativity and Gravitation, 1998
- Theory and Experiment in Gravitational PhysicsPublished by Cambridge University Press (CUP) ,1993
- Exact theory of the (Einstein) gravitational field in an arbitrary background space-timeCommunications in Mathematical Physics, 1984
- Self-interaction and gauge invarianceGeneral Relativity and Gravitation, 1970
- Interacting field of spin 2 and the einstein equationsAnnals of Physics, 1965
- Flat-space metric in general relativity theoryAnnals of Physics, 1963
- An alternative approach to the theory of gravitationAnnals of Physics, 1961
- Special-Relativistic Derivation of Generally Covariant Gravitation TheoryPhysical Review B, 1955
- On relativistic wave equations for particles of arbitrary spin in an electromagnetic fieldProceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series A. Mathematical and Physical Sciences, 1939