English

Scale-invariant alternatives to general relativity

High Energy Physics - Theory 2011-08-12 v1 General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology High Energy Physics - Phenomenology

Abstract

We study the general class of gravitational field theories constructed on the basis of scale invariance (and therefore absence of any mass parameters) and invariance under transverse diffeomorphisms (TDiff), which are the 4-volume conserving coordinate transformations. We show that these theories are equivalent to a specific type of scalar-tensor theories of gravity (invariant under all diffeomorphisms) with a number of properties, making them phenomenologically interesting. They contain, in addition to the dimensionless coupling constants of the original theory, an arbitrary dimensionful parameter Λ0\Lambda_0. This parameter is associated with an integration constant of the equations of motion, similar to the arbitrary cosmological constant appearing in unimodular gravity. We focus on the theories where Newton's constant and the electroweak scale emerge from the spontaneous breaking of scale invariance and are unrelated to Λ0\Lambda_0. The massless particle spectrum of these theories contains the graviton and a new particle -- dilaton. For Λ0=0\Lambda_0=0, the massless dilaton has only derivative couplings to matter fields and the bounds on the existence of a 5th force are easily satisfied. As for the matter fields, we determine the conditions leading to a renormalizable low-energy theory. If Λ00\Lambda_0\neq 0, scale invariance is broken. The arbitrary constant Λ0\Lambda_0 produces a "run-away" potential for the dilaton. As a consequence, the dilaton can act as a dynamical dark energy component. We elucidate the origin of the cosmological constant in the class of theories under consideration and formulate the condition leading to its absence. If this condition is satisfied, dark energy is purely dynamical and associated to the dilaton.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1104.1392,
  title  = {Scale-invariant alternatives to general relativity},
  author = {Diego Blas and Mikhail Shaposhnikov and Daniel Zenhausern},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1104.1392},
  year   = {2011}
}

Comments

39 pages, no figures

R2 v1 2026-06-21T17:50:57.580Z