Mikael von Strauss
Institut d'Astrophysique de Paris
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Featured researches published by Mikael von Strauss.
Journal of Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics | 2012
Mikael von Strauss; Angnis Schmidt-May; Jonas Enander; Edvard Mortsell; S. F. Hassan
We obtain the general cosmological evolution equations for a classically consistent theory of bimetric gravity. Their analytic solutions are demonstrated to generically allow for a cosmic evolution ...
Physics Letters B | 2012
S. F. Hassan; Angnis Schmidt-May; Mikael von Strauss
Abstract We address some recent concerns about the absence of the Boulware–Deser ghost in the Stuckelberg formulation of nonlinear massive gravity. First we provide general arguments for why any ghost analysis in the Stuckelberg formulation has to agree with existing consistency proofs that have been carried out without using Stuckelberg fields. We then demonstrate the absence of the ghost at the completely nonlinear level in the Stuckelberg formulation of the minimal massive gravity action. The constraint that removes the ghost field and the associated secondary constraint that eliminates its conjugate momentum are computed explicitly, confirming the consistency of the theory in the Stuckelberg formulation.
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.
Journal of High Energy Physics | 2013
S. F. Hassan; Angnis Schmidt-May; Mikael von Strauss
A bstractWe consider the issues that arise out of interpreting the ghost-free bimetric theory as a theory of a spin-2 field coupled to gravity. This requires identifying a gravitational metric and parameterizing deviations of the resulting theory from general relativity. To this end, we first consider the most general bimetric backgrounds for which a massless and a massive spin-2 fluctuation exist, and we compute the most general expression for the Fierz-Pauli mass. These backgrounds coincide with solutions in general relativity. Based on this, we obtain nonlinear extensions of the massive and massless spin-2 fields. The background value of the nonlinear massive field parameterizes generic deviations of the bimetric theory from GR. It is also shown that the most natural nonlinear massless field does not have standard ghost-free matter couplings, and hence cannot represent the gravitational metric. However, an appropriate gravitational metric can still be identified in the weak gravity limit. Hence in the presence of other neutral spin-2 fields, the weak gravity limit is crucial for compatibility with general relativity. We also write down the action in terms of the nonlinear massive spin-2 field and obtain its ghost-free couplings to matter. The discussion is then generalized to multimetric theories.
Journal of Physics A | 2016
Angnis Schmidt-May; Mikael von Strauss
This review is dedicated to recent progress in the field of classical, interacting, massive spin-2 theories, with a focus on ghost-free bimetric theory. We will outline its history and its development as a nontrivial extension and generalisation of nonlinear massive gravity. We present a detailed discussion of the consistency proofs of both theories, before we review Einstein solutions to the bimetric equations of motion in vacuum as well as the resulting mass spectrum. We introduce couplings to matter and then discuss the general relativity and massive gravity limits of bimetric theory, which correspond to decoupling the massive or the massless spin-2 field from the matter sector, respectively. More general classical solutions are reviewed and the present status of bimetric cosmology is summarised. An interesting corner in the bimetric parameter space which could potentially give rise to a nonlinear theory for partially massless spin-2 fields is also discussed. Relations to higher-curvature theories of gravity are explained and finally we give an overview of possible extensions of the theory and review its formulation in terms of vielbeins.
Universe | 2015
S. F. Hassan; Angnis Schmidt-May; Mikael von Strauss
In this paper, we establish the correspondence between ghost-free bimetric theory and a class of higher derivative gravity actions, including conformal gravity and new massive gravity. We also characterize the relation between the respective equations of motion and classical solutions. We illustrate that, in this framework, the spin-2 ghost of higher derivative gravity at the linear level is an artifact of the truncation to a four-derivative theory. The analysis also gives a relation between the proposed partially massless (PM) bimetric theory and conformal gravity, showing, in particular, the equivalence of their equations of motion at the four-derivative level. For the PM bimetric theory, this provides further evidence for the existence of an extra gauge symmetry and the associated loss of a propagating mode away from de Sitter backgrounds. The new symmetry is an extension of Weyl invariance, which may suggest the candidate PM bimetric theory as a possible ghost-free completion of conformal gravity.
Physics Letters B | 2013
S. F. Hassan; Angnis Schmidt-May; Mikael von Strauss
Abstract We extend the notion of the Higuchi bound and partial masslessness to ghost-free nonlinear bimetric theories. This can be achieved in a simple way by first considering linear massive spin-2 perturbations around maximally symmetric background solutions, for which the linear gauge symmetry at the Higuchi bound is easily identified. Then, requiring consistency between an appropriate subset of these transformations and the dynamical nature of the backgrounds, fixes all but one parameter in the bimetric interaction potential. This specifies the theory up to the value of the Fierz–Pauli mass and leads to the unique candidate for nonlinear partially massless bimetric theory.
Classical and Quantum Gravity | 2013
S. F. Hassan; Angnis Schmidt-May; Mikael von Strauss
Ghost-free bimetric theories describe nonlinear interactions of massive and massless spin-2 fields and, hence, provide a natural framework for investigating the phenomenon of partial masslessness for massive spin-2 fields at the nonlinear level. In this paper we analyse the spectrum of the ghost-free bimetric theory in arbitrary dimensions. Using a recently proposed construction, we identify the candidate nonlinear partially massless (PM) theories. It is shown that, in a 2-derivative setup, nonlinear PM theories can exist only in three and four dimensions. But on adding Lanczos–Lovelock terms to the bimetric action it is found that higher derivative nonlinear PM theories could also exist in higher dimensions. This is consistent with existing results on the direct construction of cubic vertices with PM gauge symmetry. We obtain the candidate nonlinear PM theories in five, six and eight dimensions but find that none exist in seven dimensions.
International Journal of Modern Physics D | 2014
S. F. Hassan; Angnis Schmidt-May; Mikael von Strauss
Ghost-free bimetric theory can describe gravity in the presence of an extra spin-2 field. We study certain aspects of dynamics in this theory: (1) It is shown that if either of the metrics is an Einstein solution then the other is always forced to be Einstein, too. For a class of bimetric models this constraint is stronger and as soon as one metric is Einstein, the other metric is forced to be proportional to it. As a consequence, the models in this class avoid a branch of pathological solutions that exhibit determinant singularities or nonlinear ghosts. These constraints persists in a generalized form when sources are included, but are destroyed in the massive gravity limit of the theory. (2) For another class of bimetric models, we show the existence of solutions that do not admit a massive gravity limit. A bimetric model that could exhibit a nonlinear version of partially massless symmetry belongs to both these classes. It is argued that if such a model exits, its symmetry will not survive in the massive gravity limit.
Physical Review D | 2016
Eugeny Babichev; Hardi Veermäe; F. Urban; Luca Marzola; Angnis Schmidt-May; Martti Raidal; Mikael von Strauss
Observational evidence for dark matter is limited to gravitational effects. Dedicated searches have yielded null results, challenging the most popular models. This can be explained if cold dark matter is a massive spin-2 particle and, thus, a manifestation of gravity itself. In the unique consistent theory for a massless and a massive spin-2 field, the latter can be heavy, stable on cosmological scales, and produced with correct abundance, and its matter coupling is naturally as weak as the gravitational one. The theory satisfies current gravity tests, and we suggest several gravitational signatures.