Planck-scale constraints on anisotropic Lorentz and CPT invariance violations from optical polarization measurements
Fabian Kislat, Henric Krawczynski

TL;DR
This study uses optical polarization data from distant astrophysical sources to set new constraints on Lorentz and CPT symmetry violations predicted by quantum gravity theories, significantly limiting possible deviations at the Planck scale.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive limits on all 16 coefficients of dimension d=5 in the SME photon sector using optical polarization measurements.
Findings
Set lower bounds on quantum gravity energy scale at 10^6 times Planck energy.
Constrained all 16 SME coefficients of dimension d=5.
Limited phase space for theories predicting polarization rotation quadratic in energy.
Abstract
Lorentz invariance is the fundamental symmetry of Einstein's theory of special relativity, and has been tested to great level of detail. However, theories of quantum gravity at the Planck scale indicate that Lorentz symmetry may be broken at that scale motivating further tests. While the Planck energy is currently unreachable by experiment, tiny residual effects at attainable energies can become measurable when photons propagate over sufficiently large distances. The Standard-Model Extension (SME) is an effective field theory approach to describe low-energy effects of quantum gravity theories. Lorentz and CPT symmetry violating effects are introduced by adding additional terms to the Standard Model Lagrangian. These terms can be ordered by the mass dimension of the corresponding operator, and the leading terms of interest have dimension d = 5. Effects of these operators are a linear…
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