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In 1886, Michelson and Morley conducted an experiment that proved that there was no “luminous ether.” The idea that light waves could propagate without a propagation media contradicted everything that was known about wave physics at the time, but this crucial realization was the foundation of Einstein's theory of special relativity. In essence, if there is no ether, then there is no preferred rest frame in the universe, so all non-accelerating observers should observe the same physical phenomena.
But what if there were a preferred rest frame? Today, we know that there is an interesting rest frame, namely the Cosmic Microwave Background, but this does not disprove Einstein's claim. This would be like holding up a stapler to prove that the universe is not rotationally invariant: the stapler itself is not rotationally invariant, but the law of physics that govern the stapler are indeed rotationally invariant. Similarly, we have shown to a very high accuracy that not only is physics invariant under spacial rotations, but it is also invariant under “space-time” rotations, and we call the combination of these two symmetries Lorentz invariance.
In the fall of 2003, Nima Arkani-Hamed and colleagues presented a novel way of breaking Lorentz invariance. They call the theory Ghost Condensation, and it provides a way to study Lorentz violations within a completely consistent theoretical framework. In the spring of 2004, I started working with Nima to study the bounds on Lorentz violations from existing experiments to see whether or not Ghost Condensation is an experimentally viable theory. The goal is to place bounds on the parameters of the theory, and then, if the theory has not been excluded, propose an experiment to search for the novel physical phenomena that the theory predicts.
Fall 2004 - Fall 2005
The theory of Ghost Condensation (GC) is a consistent way to break Einstein's famed symmetry between space and time. However, this space-time symmetry is the foundation of General Relativity, Einstein's wildly successful theory of gravity, and in general, GC is very constrained by precision tests of gravity. In the fall of 2004, we discovered Gauged Ghost Condensation (GGC), a slight deformation of GC that allows space time symmetry to be violated without making violent modifications to gravity.
With Hsin-Chia Cheng, Markus Luty, and Shinji Mukohyama, we study the implications of the theory of GGC and show how it is connected to many other proposals for slightly modified gravity. Because this theory is a simple extension of the consistent framework of GC, GGC is in our oponion the easiest way to understand the dynamics of these modified gravity theories. Because GGC allows violations of space-time symmetry to be almost entirely independent from modifications of gravity, we have the freedom to ponder exotic new scenarios for cosmic dynamics.
Spring 2005
Spring 2004