Manifestly Gauge-Invariant General Relativistic Perturbation Theory: I. Foundations
K. Giesel, S. Hofmann, T. Thiemann, O. Winkler

TL;DR
This paper introduces a gauge-invariant framework for perturbation theory in general relativity, enabling unambiguous, higher-order analysis of cosmological models and addressing longstanding issues in stability and gauge dependence.
Contribution
It develops a non-perturbative, gauge-invariant formalism for general relativistic perturbation theory based on relational observables, applicable to all orders.
Findings
Framework preserves gauge invariance non-perturbatively.
Deviations from standard linear theory are negligible in the late universe.
Formalism allows unambiguous extension to higher orders, aiding stability analysis.
Abstract
Linear cosmological perturbation theory is pivotal to a theoretical understanding of current cosmological experimental data provided e.g. by cosmic microwave anisotropy probes. A key issue in that theory is to extract the gauge invariant degrees of freedom which allow unambiguous comparison between theory and experiment. When one goes beyond first (linear) order, the task of writing the Einstein equations expanded to n'th order in terms of quantities that are gauge invariant up to terms of higher orders becomes highly non-trivial and cumbersome. This fact has prevented progress for instance on the issue of the stability of linear perturbation theory and is a subject of current debate in the literature. In this series of papers we circumvent these difficulties by passing to a manifestly gauge invariant framework. In other words, we only perturb gauge invariant, i.e. measurable…
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