Litcius/Paper detail

Causality in curved spacetimes: The speed of light and gravity

Claudia de Rham, Andrew J. Tolley

2020Physical review. D/Physical review. D.71 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Within the low-energy effective field theories of quantum electrodynamics and gravity, the low-energy speed of light or that of gravitational waves can typically be mildly superluminal in curved spacetimes. Related to this, small scattering time advances relative to the curved background can emerge from known effective field theory coefficients for photons or gravitons. We clarify why these results are not in contradiction with causality, analyticity or Lorentz invariance, and highlight various subtleties that arise when dealing with superluminalities and time advances in the gravitational context. Consistent low-energy effective theories are shown to self-protect by ensuring that any time advance and superluminality calculated within the regime of validity of the effective theory is necessarily unresolvable, and cannot be argued to lead to a macroscopically larger light cone. Such considerations are particularly relevant for putting constraints on cosmological and gravitational effective field theories and we provide explicit criteria to be satisfied so as to ensure causality.

Topics & Concepts

PhysicsCausality (physics)GravitonSuperluminal motionTheoretical physicsContext (archaeology)Effective field theoryClassical mechanicsLorentz covarianceGravitational waveGravitational fieldGravitationLorentz transformationField (mathematics)Speed of gravitySpacetimeSpeed of light (cellular automaton)Quantum mechanicsGravitational redshiftPure mathematicsBiologyMathematicsPaleontologyCosmology and Gravitation TheoriesBlack Holes and Theoretical PhysicsQuantum Electrodynamics and Casimir Effect