Equivalence Principle Implications of Modified Gravity Models
Lam Hui, Alberto Nicolis (Columbia University), Christopher Stubbs, (Harvard University)

TL;DR
This paper explores how modified gravity theories with screening mechanisms, like the chameleon, can cause significant violations of the equivalence principle, leading to observable differences in galaxy dynamics and structure.
Contribution
It demonstrates that chameleon screening can produce order one violations of the equivalence principle, which is a novel insight into modified gravity models.
Findings
Galaxies of different sizes fall at different rates due to chameleon screening.
Void sizes are affected by the screening mechanism, altering large-scale structure.
Velocity differences between stars and gas in small galaxies can reveal screening effects.
Abstract
Theories that attempt to explain the observed cosmic acceleration by modifying general relativity all introduce a new scalar degree of freedom that is active on large scales, but is screened on small scales to match experiments. We show that if such screening occurrs via the chameleon mechanism such as in f(R), it is possible to have order one violation of the equivalence principle, despite the absence of explicit violation in the microscopic action. Namely, extended objects such as galaxies or constituents thereof do not all fall at the same rate. The chameleon mechanism can screen the scalar charge for large objects but not for small ones (large/small is defined by the gravitational potential and controlled by the scalar coupling). This leads to order one fluctuations in the inertial to gravitational mass ratio. In Jordan frame, it is no longer true that all objects move on geodesics.…
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