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Constraints on Einstein-Æther theory and Hořava gravity from binary pulsar observations

Binary pulsars are ideal to test the foundations of General Relativity, such as Lorentz symmetry, which requires that experiments produce the same results in all free-falling (i.e.inertial) frames. We here break this symmetry in the gravitational sector by specifying a preferred time direction, and...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Yagi, Kent, Blas, Diego, Barausse, Enrico, Yunes, Nicolás
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.90.069901
https://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.90.069902
https://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.89.084067
http://cds.cern.ch/record/1632455
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author Yagi, Kent
Blas, Diego
Barausse, Enrico
Yunes, Nicolás
author_facet Yagi, Kent
Blas, Diego
Barausse, Enrico
Yunes, Nicolás
author_sort Yagi, Kent
collection CERN
description Binary pulsars are ideal to test the foundations of General Relativity, such as Lorentz symmetry, which requires that experiments produce the same results in all free-falling (i.e.inertial) frames. We here break this symmetry in the gravitational sector by specifying a preferred time direction, and thus a preferred frame, at each spacetime point. We then examine the consequences of this gravitational Lorentz symmetry breaking in the orbital evolution of binary pulsars, focusing on the dissipative effects. We find that Lorentz symmetry breaking modifies these effects, and thus the orbital dynamics, in two different ways. First, it generically causes the emission of dipolar radiation, which makes the orbital separation decrease faster than in General Relativity. Second, the quadrupole component of the emission is also modified. The orbital evolution depends critically on the sensitivities of the stars, which measure how their binding energies depend on the motion relative to the preferred frame. We calculate the sensitivities numerically and compute the predicted orbital decay rate of binary pulsars in Lorentz-violating gravity. By testing these predictions against observations, we place very stringent constraints on gravitational Lorentz violation.
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institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2013
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spelling cern-16324552023-01-26T07:40:57Zdoi:10.1103/PhysRevD.90.069901doi:10.1103/PhysRevD.90.069902doi:10.1103/PhysRevD.89.084067http://cds.cern.ch/record/1632455engYagi, KentBlas, DiegoBarausse, EnricoYunes, NicolásConstraints on Einstein-Æther theory and Hořava gravity from binary pulsar observationsGeneral Relativity and CosmologyBinary pulsars are ideal to test the foundations of General Relativity, such as Lorentz symmetry, which requires that experiments produce the same results in all free-falling (i.e.inertial) frames. We here break this symmetry in the gravitational sector by specifying a preferred time direction, and thus a preferred frame, at each spacetime point. We then examine the consequences of this gravitational Lorentz symmetry breaking in the orbital evolution of binary pulsars, focusing on the dissipative effects. We find that Lorentz symmetry breaking modifies these effects, and thus the orbital dynamics, in two different ways. First, it generically causes the emission of dipolar radiation, which makes the orbital separation decrease faster than in General Relativity. Second, the quadrupole component of the emission is also modified. The orbital evolution depends critically on the sensitivities of the stars, which measure how their binding energies depend on the motion relative to the preferred frame. We calculate the sensitivities numerically and compute the predicted orbital decay rate of binary pulsars in Lorentz-violating gravity. By testing these predictions against observations, we place very stringent constraints on gravitational Lorentz violation.Binary pulsars are ideal to test the foundations of general relativity, such as Lorentz symmetry, which requires that experiments produce the same results in all free-falling (i.e. inertial) frames. We here break this symmetry in the gravitational sector by specifying a preferred time direction, and thus a preferred frame, at each spacetime point. We then examine the consequences of this gravitational Lorentz symmetry breaking in the orbital evolution of binary pulsars, focusing on the dissipative effects. We find that Lorentz symmetry breaking modifies these effects, and thus the orbital dynamics, in two different ways. First, it generically causes the emission of dipolar radiation, which makes the orbital separation decrease faster than in general relativity. Second, the quadrupole component of the emission is also modified. The orbital evolution depends critically on the sensitivities of the stars, which measure how their binding energies depend on the motion relative to the preferred frame. We calculate the sensitivities numerically and compute the predicted orbital decay rate of binary pulsars in Lorentz-violating gravity. By testing these predictions against observations, we place very stringent constraints on gravitational Lorentz violation.Binary pulsars are ideal to test the foundations of General Relativity, such as Lorentz symmetry, which requires that experiments produce the same results in all free-falling (i.e.inertial) frames. We here break this symmetry in the gravitational sector by specifying a preferred time direction, and thus a preferred frame, at each spacetime point. We then examine the consequences of this gravitational Lorentz symmetry breaking in the orbital evolution of binary pulsars, focusing on the dissipative effects. We find that Lorentz symmetry breaking modifies these effects, and thus the orbital dynamics, in two different ways. First, it generically causes the emission of dipolar radiation, which makes the orbital separation decrease faster than in General Relativity. Second, the quadrupole component of the emission is also modified. The orbital evolution depends critically on the sensitivities of the stars, which measure how their binding energies depend on the motion relative to the preferred frame. We calculate the sensitivities numerically and compute the predicted orbital decay rate of binary pulsars in Lorentz-violating gravity. By testing these predictions against observations, we place very stringent constraints on gravitational Lorentz violation.arXiv:1311.7144CERN-PH-TH-2013-262CERN-PH-TH-2013-262oai:cds.cern.ch:16324552013-11-27
spellingShingle General Relativity and Cosmology
Yagi, Kent
Blas, Diego
Barausse, Enrico
Yunes, Nicolás
Constraints on Einstein-Æther theory and Hořava gravity from binary pulsar observations
title Constraints on Einstein-Æther theory and Hořava gravity from binary pulsar observations
title_full Constraints on Einstein-Æther theory and Hořava gravity from binary pulsar observations
title_fullStr Constraints on Einstein-Æther theory and Hořava gravity from binary pulsar observations
title_full_unstemmed Constraints on Einstein-Æther theory and Hořava gravity from binary pulsar observations
title_short Constraints on Einstein-Æther theory and Hořava gravity from binary pulsar observations
title_sort constraints on einstein-æther theory and hořava gravity from binary pulsar observations
topic General Relativity and Cosmology
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.90.069901
https://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.90.069902
https://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.89.084067
http://cds.cern.ch/record/1632455
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AT blasdiego constraintsoneinsteinæthertheoryandhoravagravityfrombinarypulsarobservations
AT barausseenrico constraintsoneinsteinæthertheoryandhoravagravityfrombinarypulsarobservations
AT yunesnicolas constraintsoneinsteinæthertheoryandhoravagravityfrombinarypulsarobservations