Testing the Weak Equivalence Principle and Lorentz Invariance with Multiwavelength Polarization Observations of GRB Optical Afterglows
Jun-Jie Wei, Xue-Feng Wu

TL;DR
This study uses multiwavelength polarization data from gamma-ray burst optical afterglows to simultaneously test the weak equivalence principle and Lorentz invariance, setting new bounds on potential violations in the photon sector.
Contribution
It introduces a method to constrain WEP and Lorentz invariance violations simultaneously using optical afterglow polarization data, accounting for intrinsic polarization angles.
Findings
Constraints on WEP deviation: Δγ ≈ (-4.5^{+10.0}_{-16.0})×10^{-24}
Limits on Lorentz invariance violation: η ≈ (6.5^{+15.0}_{-14.0})×10^{-7}
First simultaneous verification of WEP and Lorentz invariance in photon sector.
Abstract
Violations of both the weak equivalence principle (WEP) and Lorentz invariance can produce vacuum birefringence, which leads to an energy-dependent rotation of the polarization vector of linearly polarized emission from a given astrophysical source. However, the search for the birefringent effect has been hindered by our ignorance concerning the intrinsic polarization angle in different energy bands. Considering the contributions to the observed linear polarization angle from both the intrinsic polarization angle and the rotation angles induced by violations of the WEP and Lorentz invariance, and assuming the intrinsic polarization angle is an unknown constant, we simultaneously obtain robust bounds on possible deviations from the WEP and Lorentz invariance, by directly fitting the multiwavelength polarimetric data of the optical afterglows of gamma-ray burst (GRB) 020813 and GRB…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Solar and Space Plasma Dynamics · Cosmology and Gravitation Theories
