Phenomenology in minimal theory of massive gravity
Antonio De Felice, Shinji Mukohyama

TL;DR
This paper reformulates the minimal theory of massive gravity, confirming it has two degrees of freedom and exploring its cosmological implications, including stable self-accelerating solutions with massive tensor modes.
Contribution
It provides a Lagrangian formulation of MTMG, demonstrating the modification of both kinetic and potential terms from dRGT, and analyzes its cosmological branches and phenomenology.
Findings
MTMG has two physical degrees of freedom at nonlinear level.
The self-accelerating branch mimics GR in scalar/vector modes but has massive tensor modes.
The normal branch exhibits different structure formation dynamics due to scalar mode differences.
Abstract
We investigate the minimal theory of massive gravity (MTMG) recently introduced. After reviewing the original construction based on its Hamiltonian in the vielbein formalism, we reformulate it in terms of its Lagrangian in both the vielbein and the metric formalisms. It then becomes obvious that, unlike previous attempts in the literature of Lorentz-violating massive gravity, not only the potential but also the kinetic structure of the action is modified from the de Rham-Gabadadze-Tolley (dRGT) massive gravity theory. We confirm that the number of physical degrees of freedom in MTMG is two at fully nonlinear level. This proves the absence of various possible pathologies such as superluminality, acausality and strong coupling. Afterwards, we discuss the phenomenology of MTMG in the presence of a dust fluid. We find that on a flat homogeneous and isotropic background we have two branches.…
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