Modified theories of Gravity: Why, How and What?
S. Shankaranarayanan, Joseph P Johnson (IIT Bombay)

TL;DR
This review explores the motivations, methods, and observational implications of modified gravity theories beyond General Relativity, addressing singularities, cosmological challenges, and potential signatures distinguishing these theories.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive, pedagogical overview of why and how gravity theories are modified and discusses their unique observational signatures, serving as a reference for researchers.
Findings
Modified gravity theories address singularities and cosmological issues.
Different models have unique features and signatures.
Observational consequences can distinguish GR from MG theories.
Abstract
General Relativity (GR) was proven via the direct detection of gravitational waves from the mergers of the binary black holes and binary neutron stars by the Advanced LIGO and Advanced Virgo detectors. These detections confirmed the prediction of GR and provided the first direct evidence of the existence of stellar-mass black holes (BHs). However, the occurrence of singularities at the centers of BHs suggests that GR is inapplicable because of the breakdown of the equivalence principle at the singularities. The fact that these singularities exist indicates that GR cannot be a universal theory of space-time. In the low-energy limit, the theoretical and observational challenges faced by the CDM model also indicate that we might have to look beyond GR as the underlying theory of gravity. Unlike GR, whose field equations contain only up to second-order derivatives, the modified…
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