Equivalence Principle in Chameleon Models
Lucila Kraiselburd, Susana J. Landau, Marcelo Salgado, Daniel Sudarsky, and H\'ector Vucetich

TL;DR
This paper develops a new method to analyze how chameleon fields affect the Weak Equivalence Principle, revealing that certain parameter choices lead to detectable violations and setting new constraints on these models.
Contribution
It introduces a novel approach for computing chameleon-induced forces considering both bodies, refining previous approximations and deriving new experimental constraints.
Findings
Force depends on test body composition in the thin shell regime
New constraints on chameleon model parameters from E"otv"os experiments
Some parameter choices predict larger violations than previously estimated
Abstract
Most theories that predict time and/or space variation of fundamental constants also predict violations of the Weak Equivalence Principle. In 2004 Khoury and Weltman proposed the so called chameleon field arguing that it could help avoiding experimental bounds on the WEP while having a non-trivial cosmological impact. In this paper we revisit the extent to which these expectations continue to hold as we enter the regime of high precision tests. The basis of the study is the development of a new method for computing the force between two massive bodies induced by the chameleon field which takes into account the influence on the field by both, the large and the test bodies. We confirm that in the thin shell regime the force does depend non-trivially on the test body\' s composition, even when the chameleon coupling constants are universal. We also propose a simple criterion based on…
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Taxonomy
TopicsModular Robots and Swarm Intelligence
