scholarly journals Nonlocal gravity cosmology: An overview

Author(s):  
Salvatore Capozziello ◽  
Francesco Bajardi

We discuss some main aspects of theories of gravity containing nonlocal terms in view of cosmological applications. In particular, we consider various extensions of general relativity based on geometrical invariants as [Formula: see text], [Formula: see text] and [Formula: see text] gravity where [Formula: see text] is the Ricci curvature scalar, [Formula: see text] is the Gauss–Bonnet topological invariant, [Formula: see text] the torsion scalar and the operator [Formula: see text] gives rise to nonlocality. After selecting their functional form by using Noether symmetries, we find out exact solutions in a cosmological background. It is possible to reduce the dynamics of selected models and to find analytic solutions for the equations of motion. As a general feature of the approach, it is possible to address the accelerated expansion of the Hubble flow at various epochs, in particular the dark energy issues, by taking into account nonlocality corrections to the gravitational Lagrangian. On the other hand, it is possible to search for gravitational nonlocal effects also at astrophysical scales. In this perspective, we search for symmetries of [Formula: see text] gravity also in a spherically symmetric background and constrain the free parameters, Specifically, by taking into account the S2 star orbiting around the Galactic Center SgrA[Formula: see text], it is possible to study how nonlocality affects stellar orbits around such a massive self-gravitating object.

1975 ◽  
Vol 69 ◽  
pp. 237-244
Author(s):  
P. O. Vandervoort

This paper reviews a series of investigations of the orbits of stars in the regions of the Lindblad resonances of a spiral galaxy. The analysis is formulated in an epicyclic approximation. Analytic solutions of the epicyclic equations of motion are obtained by the method of harmonic balance of Bogoliubov and Mitropolsky. These solutions represent the resonance phenomena exhibited by the orbits in generally excellent agreement with numerical solutions.


Author(s):  
S.R. Myrzakul ◽  
◽  
Y.M. Myrzakulov ◽  
М. Arzimbetova ◽  
◽  
...  

. Modified theories of gravity have become a kind of paradigm in modern physics because they seem to solve several shortcomings of the standard General Theory of Relativity (GTR) related to cosmology, astrophysics and quantum field theory. The most famous modified theories of gravity are F(R) and F(T) theories of gravity. A generalization of these two modified theories and gravitations, which was first proposed by Myrzakulov Ratbay. In this paper, we study an inhomogeneous isotropic cosmological model with a fermion field f-essence whose action has the form , where R is the scalar of curvature, and T is the torsion scalar, and Lm is the Lagrangian f-essence. A particular case is studied in detail when parameters are obtained that describe the current accelerated expansion of the Universe. The type of Lagrangian f-essence of this model is determined. The presented results show that gravity with f-essence can describe inflation in the early evolution of the Universe. A modified F(R, T) gravity with f-essence is considered. Equations of motion were obtained and the inflationary period of the early Universe was considered. To describe the inflationary period, the form of the Hubble parameter and the slow-roll parameter were determined.


Author(s):  
Nathalie Deruelle ◽  
Jean-Philippe Uzan

This chapter presents the basics of the ‘effective-one-body’ approach to the two-body problem in general relativity. It also shows that the 2PN equations of motion can be mapped. This can be done by means of an appropriate canonical transformation, to a geodesic motion in a static, spherically symmetric spacetime, thus considerably simplifying the dynamics. Then, including the 2.5PN radiation reaction force in the (resummed) equations of motion, this chapter provides the waveform during the inspiral, merger, and ringdown phases of the coalescence of two non-spinning black holes into a final Kerr black hole. The chapter also comments on the current developments of this approach, which is instrumental in building the libraries of waveform templates that are needed to analyze the data collected by the current gravitational wave detectors.


2009 ◽  
Vol 692 (2) ◽  
pp. 1075-1109 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Gillessen ◽  
F. Eisenhauer ◽  
S. Trippe ◽  
T. Alexander ◽  
R. Genzel ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 103 (8) ◽  
Author(s):  
Hong Qi ◽  
Richard O’Shaughnessy ◽  
Patrick Brady

1972 ◽  
Vol 94 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-7 ◽  
Author(s):  
O. B. Dale ◽  
R. Cohen

A method is presented for obtaining and optimizing the frequency response of one-dimensional damped linear continuous systems. The systems considered are assumed to contain unknown constant parameters in the boundary conditions and equations of motion which the designer can vary to obtain a minimum resonant response in some selected frequency interval. The unknown parameters need not be strictly dissipative nor unconstrained. No analytic solutions, either exact or approximate, are required for the system response and only initial value numerical integrations of the state and adjoint differential equations are required to obtain the optimal parameter set. The combinations of state variables comprising the response and the response locations are arbitrary.


Mathematics ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (23) ◽  
pp. 3038
Author(s):  
Zi-Liang Li ◽  
Jin-Qing Liu

The horizontal equations of motion for an inviscid homogeneous fluid under the influence of pressure disturbance and waves are applied to investigate the nonlinear process of solitary waves and cyclone genesis forced by a moving pressure disturbance in atmosphere. Based on the reductive perturbation analysis, it is shown that the nonlinear evolution equation for the wave amplitude satisfies the Korteweg–de Vries equation with a forcing term (fKdV equation for short), which describes the physics of a shallow layer of fluid subject to external pressure forcing. Then, with the help of Hirota’s direct method, the analytic solutions of the fKdV equation are studied and some exact vortex solutions are given as examples, from which one can see that the solitary waves and vortex multi-pole structures can be excited by external pressure forcing in atmosphere, such as pressure perturbation and waves. It is worthy to point out that cyclone and waves can be excited by different type of moving atmospheric pressure forcing source.


2021 ◽  
pp. 2150100
Author(s):  
Andronikos Paliathanasis

We investigate the existence of Liouville integrable cosmological models in hybrid metric-Palatini theory. Specifically, we use the symmetry conditions for the existence of quadratic in the momentum conservation laws for the field equations as constraint conditions for the determination of the unknown functional form of the theory. The exact and analytic solutions of the integrable systems found in this study are presented in terms of quadratics and Laurent expansions.


2018 ◽  
Vol 191 ◽  
pp. 01010 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexander Zakharov

To evaluate a potential usually one analyzes trajectories of test particles. For the Galactic Center case astronomers use bright stars or photons, so there are two basic observational techniques to investigate a gravitational potential, namely, (a) monitoring the orbits of bright stars near the Galactic Center as it is going on with 10m Keck twin and four 8m VLT telescopes equipped with adaptive optics facilities (in addition, recently the IR interferometer GRAVITY started to operate with VLT); (b) measuring the size and shape of shadows around black hole with VLBI-technique using telescopes operating in mm-band. At the moment, one can use a small relativistic correction approach for stellar orbit analysis, however, in the future the approximation will not be precise enough due to enormous progress of observational facilities and recently the GRAVITY team found that the first post-Newtonian correction has to be taken into account for the gravitational redshift in the S2 star orbit case. Meanwhile for smallest structure analysis in VLBI observations one really needs a strong gravitational field approximation. We discuss results of observations and their interpretations. In spite of great efforts there is a very slow progress to resolve dark matter (DM) and dark energy (DE) puzzles and in these circumstances in last years a number of alternative theories of gravity have been proposed. Parameters of these theories could be effectively constrained with of observations of the Galactic Center. We show some cases of alternative theories of gravity where their parameters are constrained with observations, in particular, we consider massive theory of gravity. We choose the alternative theory of gravity since there is a significant activity in this field and in the last years theorists demonstrated an opportunity to create such theories without ghosts, on the other hand, recently, the joint LIGO & Virgo team presented an upper limit on graviton mass such as mg< 1:2 × 10-22eV [1] analyzing gravitational wave signal in their first paper where they reported about the discovery of gravitational waves from binary black holes as it was suggested by C. Will [2]. So, the authors concluded that their observational data do not indicate a significant deviation from classical general relativity. We show that an analysis of bright star trajectories could estimate a graviton mass with a commensurable accuracy in comparison with an approach used in gravitational wave observations and the estimates obtained with these two approaches are consistent. Therefore, such an analysis gives an opportunity to treat observations of bright stars near the Galactic Center as a useful tool to obtain constraints on the fundamental gravity law. We showed that in the future graviton mass estimates obtained with analysis of trajectories of bright stars would be better than current LIGO bounds on the value, therefore, based on a potential reconstruction at the Galactic Center we obtain bounds on a graviton mass and these bounds are comparable with LIGO constraints. Analyzing size of shadows around the supermassive black hole at the Galactic Center (or/and in the center of M87) one could constrain parameters of different alternative theories of gravity as well.


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