Johannes Noller
University of Oxford
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Publication
Featured researches published by Johannes Noller.
Physical Review Letters | 2017
Tessa Baker; Ignacy Sawicki; Johannes Noller; Emilio Bellini; Macarena Lagos; Pedro G. Ferreira
The detection of an electromagnetic counterpart (GRB 170817A) to the gravitational-wave signal (GW170817) from the merger of two neutron stars opens a completely new arena for testing theories of gravity. We show that this measurement allows us to place stringent constraints on general scalar-tensor and vector-tensor theories, while allowing us to place an independent bound on the graviton mass in bimetric theories of gravity. These constraints severely reduce the viable range of cosmological models that have been proposed as alternatives to general relativistic cosmology.
Physics of the Dark Universe | 2016
Philip Bull; Yashar Akrami; Julian Adamek; Tessa Baker; Emilio Bellini; Jose Beltrán Jiménez; Eloisa Bentivegna; Stefano Camera; Sebastien Clesse; Jonathan H. Davis; Enea Di Dio; Jonas Enander; Alan Heavens; Lavinia Heisenberg; Bin Hu; Claudio Llinares; Roy Maartens; Edvard Mortsell; Seshadri Nadathur; Johannes Noller; Roman Pasechnik; Marcel S. Pawlowski; Thiago S. Pereira; Miguel Quartin; Angelo Ricciardone; Signe Riemer-Sørensen; Massimiliano Rinaldi; Jeremy Sakstein; Ippocratis D. Saltas; Vincenzo Salzano
Despite its continued observational successes, there is a persistent (and growing) interest in extending cosmology beyond the standard model, ΛCDM. This is motivated by a range of apparently serious theoretical issues, involving such questions as the cosmological constant problem, the particle nature of dark matter, the validity of general relativity on large scales, the existence of anomalies in the CMB and on small scales, and the predictivity and testability of the inflationary paradigm. In this paper, we summarize the current status of ΛCDM as a physical theory, and review investigations into possible alternatives along a number of different lines, with a particular focus on highlighting the most promising directions. While the fundamental problems are proving reluctant to yield, the study of alternative cosmologies has led to considerable progress, with much more to come if hopes about forthcoming high-precision observations and new theoretical ideas are fulfilled.
Physical Review D | 2014
Johannes Noller; Francesca von Braun-Bates; Pedro G. Ferreira
Relativistic scalar fields are ubiquitous in modified theories of gravity. An important tool in understanding their impact on structure formation, especially in the context of N-body simulations, is the quasi-static approximation in which the time evolution of perturbations in the scalar fields is discarded. We show that this approximation must be used with some care by studying linearly perturbed scalar field cosmologies and quantifying the errors that arise from taking the quasi-static limit. We focus on f(R) and chameleon models and link the accuracy of the quasi-static approximation to the fast/slow-roll behaviour of the background and its proximity to {\Lambda}CDM. Investigating a large range of scales, from super- to sub-horizon, we find that slow-rolling ({\Lambda}CDM-like) backgrounds generically result in good quasi-static behaviour, even on (super-)horizon scales. We also discuss how the approximation might affect studying the non-linear growth of structure in numerical N-body simulations.
Physical Review D | 2011
Johannes Noller; Joao Magueijo
We investigate non-Gaussianity in general single field models without assuming slow-roll conditions or the exact scale invariance of the scalar power spectrum. The models considered include general single field inflation (e.g. Dirac-Born-Infeld and canonical inflation) as well as bimetric models. We compute the full non-Gaussian amplitude A, its size f{sub NL}, its shape, and the running with scale n{sub NG}. In doing so we show that observational constraints allow significant violations of slow-roll conditions and we derive explicit bounds on slow-roll parameters for fast-roll single field scenarios. A variety of new observational signatures is found for models respecting these bounds. We also explicitly construct concrete model implementations giving rise to this new phenomenology.
Journal of High Energy Physics | 2016
Scott Melville; Johannes Noller
A bstractWe investigate matter couplings in massive bigravity. We find a new family of such consistent couplings, including and extending known consistent matter couplings, and we investigate their decoupling limits, ADM decompositions, Higuchi bounds and further aspects. We show that differences to previous known consistent couplings only arise beyond the Λ3 decoupling limit and discuss the uniqueness of consistent matter couplings and how this is related to the so-called symmetric vielbein condition. Since we work in a vielbein formulation, these results easily generalise to multi-gravity.
Journal of High Energy Physics | 2014
James H. C. Scargill; Johannes Noller; Pedro G. Ferreira
A bstractIn this paper we study multi-gravity (multi-metric and multi-vielbein) theories in the presence of cycles of interactions (cycles in the so-called ‘theory graph’). It has been conjectured that in multi-metric theories such cycles lead to the introduction of a ghost-like instability, which, however, is absent in the multi-vielbein version of such theories. In this paper we answer this question in the affirmative by explicitly demonstrating the presence of the ghost in such multi-metric theories in the form of dangerous higher derivative terms in the decoupling limit Lagrangian; we also investigate the structure of interactions in the vielbein version of these theories and argue why the same ghost does not appear there. Finally we discuss the ramifications of our result on the dimensional deconstruction paradigm, which would seek an equivalence between such theories and a truncated Kaluza-Klein theory, and find that the impediment to taking the continuum limit due to a low strong-coupling scale is exacerbated by the presence of the ghost, when these theories are constructed using metrics.
Journal of High Energy Physics | 2015
Johannes Noller; James H. C. Scargill
A bstractIn this paper we investigate the decoupling limit of a particular class of multi-gravity theories, i.e. of theories of interacting spin-2 fields. We explicitly compute the interactions of helicity-0 modes in this limit, showing that they take on the form of multi- Galileons and dual forms. In the process we extend the recently discovered Galileon dualities, deriving a set of new multi-Galileon dualities. These are also intrinsically connected to healthy, but higher-derivative, multi-scalar field theories akin to ‘beyond Horndeski’ models.
Journal of Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics | 2012
David J. Mulryne; Johannes Noller; Nelson J. Nunes
We calculate the perturbed action, at second and third order, for a massive three-form field minimally coupled to gravity, and use it to explore the observational predictions of three-form inflation. One intriguing result is that the value of the spectral index is nearly independent of the three-form potential, being fixed solely by the number of e-folds of inflation, with ns = 0.97 for the canonical number of 60. Considering the bispectrum, we employ standard techniques to give explicit results for two models, one of which produces a large non-Gaussianity. Finally, we confirm our results by employing a duality relating the three-form theory to a non-canonical scalar field theory and explicitly re-computing results in this dual picture.
Physical Review D | 2010
Joao Magueijo; Johannes Noller
We revisit the question of whether fluctuations in hydrodynamical, adiabatical matter could explain the observed structures in our Universe. We consider matter with variable equation of state
Classical and Quantum Gravity | 2017
Philippe Brax; Anne-Christine Davis; Johannes Noller
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