Can the gamma-ray bursts travelling through the interstellar space be explained without invoking the drastic assumption of Lorentz invariance violation?
Masud Chaichian, Iver Brevik, Markku Oksanen

TL;DR
This paper examines whether gamma-ray burst delays can be explained without Lorentz invariance violation, analyzing interstellar medium dispersion and quantum gravitational effects, and finds current models insufficient to fully explain observations.
Contribution
The study introduces a quantum field theory-based calculation of axion plasma dispersion and assesses its impact on GRB delays, highlighting the limitations of existing explanations.
Findings
Axion plasma density is too low to explain GRB delays.
Dispersive plasma predicts higher frequency speeds, unlike Lorentz violation.
Current media and models cannot fully account for observed delays.
Abstract
Experimental observations indicate that gamma-ray bursts (GRB) and high-energy neutrino bursts may travel at different speeds with a typical delay measured at the order of hours or days. We discuss two potential interpretations for the GRB delay: dispersion of light in interstellar medium and violation of Lorentz invariance due to quantum gravitational fluctuations. Among a few other media, we consider dispersion of light in an axion plasma, obtaining the axion plasma frequency and the dispersion relation from quantum field theory for the first time. We find that the density of axions inferred from observations is far too low to produce the observed GRB delay. However, a more precise estimation of the spatial distribution of axions is required for a conclusive result. Other known media are also unable to account for the GRB delay, although there remains uncertainties in the observations…
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