Positivity bounds from multiple vacua and their cosmological consequences
Scott Melville, Johannes Noller

TL;DR
This paper investigates how positivity bounds, which constrain effective field theories based on fundamental principles, can be extended to multiple vacua in cosmological models like the covariant Galileon, revealing significant implications for cosmology.
Contribution
It introduces a method to apply positivity bounds to multiple vacua, including boost-breaking ones, and explores their impact on the viability of cosmological models.
Findings
Positivity bounds can be extended beyond the single vacuum assumption.
Certain vacua are incompatible with unitarity, causality, and locality in the UV.
Cosmologically favored regions are often ruled out by positivity bounds.
Abstract
Positivity bounds - constraints on any low-energy effective field theory imposed by the fundamental axioms of unitarity, causality and locality in the UV - have recently been used to constrain various effective field theories relevant for cosmology. However, to date most of these bounds have assumed that there is a single Lorentz-invariant vacuum in which all fields have zero expectation value and in many cosmologically relevant models this is not the case. We explore ways to overcome this limitation by investigating a simple example model, the covariant Galileon, which possesses a one-parameter family of Lorentz-invariant vacua as well as multiple boost-breaking vacua. Each of these vacua has a corresponding set of positivity bounds, and we show how a particular (beyond-the-forward-limit) bound can be used to map out the parameter space according to which vacua may persist in the UV…
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