Scales of gravity

Gia Dvali, Gregory Gabadadze, Marko Kolanović, and Francesco Nitti
Phys. Rev. D 65, 024031 – Published 26 December 2001
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Abstract

We propose a framework in which the quantum gravity scale can be as low as 103eV. The key assumption is that the standard model ultraviolet cutoff is much higher than the quantum gravity scale. This ensures that we observe conventional weak gravity. We construct an explicit brane-world model in which the brane-localized standard model is coupled to strong 5D gravity of infinite-volume flat extra space. Because of the high ultraviolet scale, the standard model fields generate a large graviton kinetic term on the brane. This kinetic term “shields” the standard model from the strong bulk gravity. As a result, an observer on the brane sees weak 4D gravity up to astronomically large distances beyond which gravity becomes five dimensional. Modeling quantum gravity above its scale by the closed string spectrum we show that the shielding phenomenon protects the standard model from an apparent phenomenological catastrophe due to the exponentially large number of light string states. The collider experiments, astrophysics, cosmology and gravity measurements independently point to the same lower bound on the quantum gravity scale, 103eV. For this value the model has experimental signatures both for colliders and for submillimeter gravity measurements. Black holes reveal certain interesting properties in this framework.

  • Received 18 July 2001

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.65.024031

©2001 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

Gia Dvali1,*, Gregory Gabadadze2,†, Marko Kolanović1,‡, and Francesco Nitti1,§

  • 1Department of Physics, New York University, New York, New York 10003
  • 2Theoretical Physics Institute, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455

  • *Email address: gd23@nyu.edu
  • Email address: gabadadz@physics.umn.edu
  • Email address: mk679@nyu.edu
  • §Email address: fn230@nyu.edu

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Issue

Vol. 65, Iss. 2 — 15 January 2002

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