Covariantly quantum Galileon

Ippocratis D. Saltas and Vincenzo Vitagliano
Phys. Rev. D 95, 105002 – Published 17 May 2017

Abstract

We derive the 1–loop effective action of the cubic Galileon coupled to quantum-gravitational fluctuations in a background and gauge-independent manner, employing the covariant framework of DeWitt and Vilkovisky. Although the bare action respects shift symmetry, the coupling to gravity induces an effective mass to the scalar, of the order of the cosmological constant, as a direct result of the nonflat field–space metric, the latter ensuring the field-reparametrization invariance of the formalism. Within a gauge-invariant regularization scheme, we discover novel, gravitationally induced non-Galileon higher-derivative interactions in the effective action. These terms, previously unnoticed within standard, noncovariant frameworks, are not Planck suppressed. Unless tuned to be subdominant, their presence could have important implications for the classical and quantum phenomenology of the theory.

  • Received 25 November 2016

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.95.105002

© 2017 American Physical Society

Physics Subject Headings (PhySH)

  1. Research Areas
Gravitation, Cosmology & Astrophysics

Authors & Affiliations

Ippocratis D. Saltas1,* and Vincenzo Vitagliano2,†

  • 1Institute of Astrophysics & Space Sciences, Faculty of Sciences, Campo Grande, PT1749-016 Lisboa, Portugal
  • 2Multidisciplinary Center for Astrophysics & Department of Physics, Instituto Superior Técnico, University of Lisbon, Av. Rovisco Pais 1, 1049-001 Lisboa, Portugal

  • *isaltas@fc.ul.pt
  • vincenzo.vitagliano@ist.utl.pt

Article Text (Subscription Required)

Click to Expand

References (Subscription Required)

Click to Expand
Issue

Vol. 95, Iss. 10 — 15 May 2017

Reuse & Permissions
Access Options
Author publication services for translation and copyediting assistance advertisement

Authorization Required


×
×

Images

×

Sign up to receive regular email alerts from Physical Review D

Log In

Cancel
×

Search


Article Lookup

Paste a citation or DOI

Enter a citation
×