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Dive into the research topics where Katsuki Aoki is active.

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Featured researches published by Katsuki Aoki.


Physical Review D | 2016

Massive gravitons as dark matter and gravitational waves

Katsuki Aoki; Shinji Mukohyama

We consider the possibility that the massive graviton is a viable candidate for dark matter in the context of bimetric gravity. We first derive the energy-momentum tensor of the massive graviton and show that it indeed behaves as that of dark matter fluid. We then discuss a production mechanism and the present abundance of massive gravitons as dark matter. Since the metric to which ordinary matter fields couple is a linear combination of the two mass eigenstates of bigravity, production of massive gravitons, i.e., the dark matter particles, is inevitably accompanied by generation of massless gravitons, i.e., the gravitational waves. Therefore, in this scenario some information about dark matter in our Universe is encoded in gravitational waves. For instance, if LIGO detects gravitational waves generated by the preheating after inflation, then the massive graviton with the mass of


Physical Review D | 2014

Dark matter in ghost-free bigravity theory: From a galaxy scale to the universe

Katsuki Aoki; Kei Ichi Maeda

\ensuremath{\sim}0.01\text{ }\text{ }\mathrm{GeV}


Physical Review D | 2017

Massive graviton dark matter with environment dependent mass: A natural explanation of the dark matter-baryon ratio

Katsuki Aoki; Shinji Mukohyama

is a candidate for dark matter.


Physical Review D | 2016

Vainshtein mechanism in massive gravity nonlinear sigma models

Katsuki Aoki; Shuntaro Mizuno

We study the origin of dark matter based on the ghost-free bigravity theory with twin matter fluids. The present cosmic acceleration can be explained by the existence of graviton mass, while dark matter is required in several cosmological situations [the galactic missing mass, the cosmic structure formation and the standard big-bang scenario (the cosmological nucleosynthesis vs the CMB observation)]. Assuming that the Compton wavelength of the massive graviton is shorter than a galactic scale, we show the bigravity theory can explain dark matter by twin matter fluid as well as the cosmic acceleration by tuning appropriate coupling constants.


Physical Review D | 2016

Relativistic stars in bigravity theory

Katsuki Aoki; Kei Ichi Maeda; Makoto Tanabe

We propose a scenario that can naturally explain the observed dark matter-baryon ratio in the context of bimetric theory with a chameleon field. We introduce two additional gravitational degrees of freedom, the massive graviton and the chameleon field, corresponding to dark matter and dark energy, respectively. The chameleon field is assumed to be non-minimally coupled to dark matter, i.e., the massive graviton, through the graviton mass terms. We find that the dark matter-baryon ratio is dynamically adjusted to the observed value due to the energy transfer by the chameleon field. As a result, the model can explain the observed dark matter-baryon ratio independently from the initial abundance of them.


Physical Review D | 2018

Condensate of massive graviton and dark matter

Katsuki Aoki; Kei Ichi Maeda

We study the stability of the Vainshtein screening solution of the massive/bi-gravity based on the massive nonlinear sigma model as the effective action inside the Vainshtein radius. The effective action is obtained by taking the


Proceedings of the MG14 Meeting on General Relativity | 2017

Cosmological and astrophysical Vainshtein mechanism in bigravity

Katsuki Aoki; Kei Ichi Maeda; Makoto Tanabe; Ryo Namba

\Lambda_2


Physical Review D | 2014

Cosmology in ghost-free bigravity theory with twin matter fluids: The origin of dark matter

Katsuki Aoki; Kei Ichi Maeda

decoupling limit around a curved spacetime. First we derive a general consequence that any Ricci flat Vainshtein screening solution is unstable when we take into account the excitation of the scalar graviton only. This instability suggests that the nonlinear excitation of the scalar graviton is not sufficient to obtain a successful Vainshtein screening in massive/bi-gravity. Then to see the role of the excitation of the vector graviton, we study perturbations around the static and spherically symmetric solution obtained in bigravity explicitly. As a result, we find that linear excitations of the vector graviton cannot be helpful and the solution still suffers from a ghost and/or a gradient instability for any parameters of the theory for this background.


Physical Review D | 2015

Stability of the early universe in bigravity theory

Katsuki Aoki; Kei Ichi Maeda; Ryo Namba

Assuming static and spherically symmetric spacetimes in the ghost-free bigravity theory, we find a relativistic star solution, which is very close to that in general relativity. The coupling constants are classified into two classes: Class [I] and Class [II]. Although the Vainshtein screening mechanism is found in the weak gravitational field for both classes, we find that there is no regular solution beyond the critical value of the compactness in Class [I]. This implies that the maximum mass of a neutron star in Class [I] becomes much smaller than that in GR. On the other hand, for the solution in Class [II], the Vainshtein screening mechanism works well even in a relativistic star and the result in GR is recovered.


arXiv: General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology | 2018

Phenomenology in type-I minimally modified gravity

Katsuki Aoki; Shinji Mukohyama; Chunshan Lin; Antonio De Felice; Michele Oliosi

We study coherently oscillating massive gravitons in the ghost-free bigravity theory. This coherent field can be interpreted as a condensate of the massive gravitons. We first define the effective energy-momentum tensor of the coherent massive gravitons in a curved spacetime. We then study the background dynamics of the universe and the cosmic structure formation including the effects of the coherent massive gravitons. We find that the condensate of the massive graviton behaves as a dark matter component of the universe. From the geometrical point of view the condensate is regarded as a spacetime anisotropy. Hence, in our scenario, dark matter is originated from the tiny deformation of the spacetime. We also discuss a production of the spacetime anisotropy and find that the extragalactic magnetic field of a primordial origin can yield a sufficient amount for dark matter.

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Shinji Mukohyama

Yukawa Institute for Theoretical Physics

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Antonio De Felice

Tokyo University of Science

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