TY - JOUR
T1 - Probing screening and the graviton mass with gravitational waves
AU - Perkins, Scott
AU - Yunes, Nicolás
N1 - The authors would like to thank Claudia de Rham, Rachel Rosen, Hector Okada da Silva, and Mark Trodden for useful conversations and input. We would also like to thank Kent Yagi for comparisons with his Fisher code. The authors acknowledge support from NSF grant PHY-1759615 and NASA grants NNX16AB98G and 80NSSC17M0041.
PY - 2019/2/13
Y1 - 2019/2/13
N2 -
Gravitational waves can probe fundamental physics, leading to new constraints on the mass of the graviton. Previous tests, however, have neglected the effect of screening, which is typically present in modified theories that predict a non-zero graviton mass. We here study whether future gravitational wave observations can constrain the graviton mass when screening effects are taken into account. We first consider model-independent corrections to the propagation of gravitational waves due to screened massive graviton effects. We find that future observation can place constraints on the screening radius and the graviton mass of O(10
2
)-O(10
4
) Mpc and O(10
-22
)-O(10
-26
) eV respectively. We also consider screening effects in two specific theories, ghost-free massive gravity and bigravity, that might not realize these types of propagation modifications, but that do provide analytic expressions for screening parameters relevant to our analysis allowing for more concrete results. However, the constraints we are able to place are small. The reason for this is that second- and third-generation detectors are sensitive to graviton masses that lead to very small screening radii in these particular models. The effect of screening, however, can become important as constraints on the graviton mass are improved through the stacking of multiple observations in the near future.
AB -
Gravitational waves can probe fundamental physics, leading to new constraints on the mass of the graviton. Previous tests, however, have neglected the effect of screening, which is typically present in modified theories that predict a non-zero graviton mass. We here study whether future gravitational wave observations can constrain the graviton mass when screening effects are taken into account. We first consider model-independent corrections to the propagation of gravitational waves due to screened massive graviton effects. We find that future observation can place constraints on the screening radius and the graviton mass of O(10
2
)-O(10
4
) Mpc and O(10
-22
)-O(10
-26
) eV respectively. We also consider screening effects in two specific theories, ghost-free massive gravity and bigravity, that might not realize these types of propagation modifications, but that do provide analytic expressions for screening parameters relevant to our analysis allowing for more concrete results. However, the constraints we are able to place are small. The reason for this is that second- and third-generation detectors are sensitive to graviton masses that lead to very small screening radii in these particular models. The effect of screening, however, can become important as constraints on the graviton mass are improved through the stacking of multiple observations in the near future.
KW - experimental relativity
KW - gravitational screening
KW - gravitational waves
KW - graviton mass
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85062635151
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85062635151#tab=citedBy
U2 - 10.1088/1361-6382/aafce6
DO - 10.1088/1361-6382/aafce6
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85062635151
SN - 0264-9381
VL - 36
JO - Classical and Quantum Gravity
JF - Classical and Quantum Gravity
IS - 5
M1 - 055013
ER -