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Tuesday, 24 January 2017, 14:00 in P8445B
Prof. Daniele Steer (APC, Paris 7)
Alternatives to General Relativity: Counting the degrees of freedom in "Horndeski-like" theories
Scalar-tensor theories of gravity are widely used in cosmology and extensions of general relativity, with applications ranging from inflation to the late-time observed acceleration of the Universe, and tests of gravitation. In this talk we focus on so-called "Horndeski-like" theories - scalar-tensor theories in 4 dimensions having field equations (both for the metric and the scalar) with derivatives of order less than or equal to two - as well as some extensions of these which have been proposed recently. As we will discuss, having covariant second-order field equations is a priori enough, once diffeomorphism invariance is taken into account, to have just 3 propagating degrees of freedom in vacuum (counting 2 for the metric and 1 for the scalar), and to put the theory on the safe side as far as Ostrogradski’s type of instability is concerned. But there seem to be exceptions: indeed the extensions mentioned above appear to have higher order equations of motion and yet propagate 3 degrees of freedom. We will try to clarify these different points, all of which are relevant for the applications of these theories.
Seminars in 2016:
2016-10-14 14:30 in C9000 - Keith Vanderlinde (Dunlap Institute): Cosmology, cell phones, and video games: Mapping dark energy with CHIME (physics colloquium) 2017-01-24 14:00 in P8445B - Daniele Steer (APC, Paris 7): Alternatives to General Relativity: Counting the degrees of freedom in "Horndeski-like" theories 2017-01-31 14:00 in P8445B - David Langlois (APC, Paris): Degenerate higher order scalar tensor theories beyond Horndeski 2017-03-10 14:30 in C9000 - Mark Van Raamsdonk (UBC): Gravity and entanglement (physics colloquium) 2017-04-04 14:00 in P8445B - Kiyoshi Masui (UBC): Fast Radio Bursts: Mysterious flashes from cosmological distances
[ See complete seminar archives | iCal feed ]
Modified by Andrei Frolov <frolov@sfu.ca> on 2023-11-01