Anisotropic cosmological solutions in massive vector theories
Lavinia Heisenberg, Ryotaro Kase, Shinji Tsujikawa

TL;DR
This paper investigates anisotropic cosmological solutions in massive vector theories, showing the stability of solutions, their evolution during different cosmic epochs, and the conditions leading to isotropy, with implications for dark radiation and dark energy.
Contribution
It extends generalized Proca theories to include higher-order terms, analyzing anisotropic solutions and their stability, and explores their cosmological implications including dark radiation and isotropization.
Findings
Existence of anisotropic solutions with constant $rac{ ext{anisotropic expansion}}{ ext{isotropic expansion}}$ during radiation era.
Spatial vector component acts as dark radiation with equation of state near 1/3.
Solutions tend toward isotropic de Sitter fixed point under certain conditions.
Abstract
In beyond-generalized Proca theories including the extension to theories higher than second order, we study the role of a spatial component of a massive vector field on the anisotropic cosmological background. We show that, as in the case of the isotropic cosmological background, there is no additional ghostly degrees of freedom associated with the Ostrogradski instability. In second-order generalized Proca theories we find the existence of anisotropic solutions on which the ratio between the anisotropic expansion rate and the isotropic expansion rate remains nearly constant in the radiation-dominated epoch. In the regime where is constant, the spatial vector component works as a dark radiation with the equation of state close to . During the matter era, the ratio decreases with the decrease of . As long as the conditions $|\Sigma| \ll…
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