Lorentz-violating electrodynamics
Searches for Lorentz violation involving photons are among the best tests of relativity. Examples range from modern versions of the classic Michelson-Morley experiment that utilize highly stable electromagnetic resonant cavities to searches for tiny deviations from c in the speed of light emitted by distant astrophysical sources. Due to the extreme distances involved, astrophysical studies have achieved sensitivities on the order of parts in 1038.
Minimal Lorentz-violating electrodynamics
The most general framework
for studies of relativity violations
is an effective field theory called the
Standard-Model Extension (SME).[1][2][3]
Lorentz-violating operators in the SME
are classified by their mass dimension .
To date, the most widely studied limit of the SME
is the minimal SME,[4]
which limits attention to operators
of renormalizable mass-dimension,
,
in flat spacetime.
Within the minimal SME,
photons are governed by the lagrangian density
The first term on the right-hand side
is the conventional Maxwell lagrangian
and gives rise to the usual source-free Maxwell equations.
The next term violates both Lorentz and CPT invariance
and is constructed from a dimension operator
and a constant coefficient
for Lorentz violation
.[5][6]
The second term introduces Lorentz violation,
but preserves CPT invariance.
It consists of a dimension
operator
contracted with constant coefficients for Lorentz violation
.[7]
There are a total of four independent
coefficients and
nineteen
coefficients.
Both Lorentz-violating terms are invariant
under observer Lorentz transformations,
implying that the physics in independent
of observer or coordinate choice.
However, the coefficient tensors
and
are outside the control of experimenters
and can be viewed as constant background
fields that fill the entire Universe,
introducing directionality to the otherwise
isotropic spacetime.
Photons interact with these background fields
and experience frame-dependent effects,
violating Lorentz invariance.
The mathematics describing Lorentz violation in photons is similar to that of conventional electromagnetism in dielectrics. As a result, many of the effects of Lorentz violation are also seen in light passing through transparent materials. These include changes in the speed that can depend on frequency, polarization, and direction of propagation. Consequently, Lorentz violation can introduce dispersion in light propagating in empty space. It can also introduce birefringence, an effect seen in crystals such as calcite. The best constraints on Lorentz violation come from constraints on birefringence in light from astrophysical sources.[8]
Nonminimal Lorentz-violating electrodynamics
The full SME incorporates general relativity and curved spacetimes. It also includes operators of arbitrary (nonrenormalizable) dimension . The general gauge-invariant photon sector was constructed in 2009 by Kostelecky and Mewes.[9]It was shown that the more general theory could be written in a form similar to the minimal case,
where the constant coefficients are promoted to operators
and
,
which take the form of power series
in spacetime derivatives.
The
operator
contains all the CPT-odd
terms,
while the CPT-even terms with
are in
.
While the nonrenormalizable terms
give many of the same types of signatures
as the
case,
the effects generally grow
faster with frequency,
due to the additional derivatives.
More complex directional dependence typically also arises.
Vacuum dispersion of light without birefringence
is another feature that is found,
which does not arise in the minimal SME.[9]
Experiments
Vacuum birefringence
Birefringence of light occurs when the solutions to the modified Lorentz-violating Maxwell equations give rise to polarization-dependent speeds.[9][10][11] Light propagates as the combination of two orthogonal polarizations that propagate at slightly different phase velocities. A gradual change in the relative phase results as one of the polarizations outpaces the other. The total polarization (the sum of the two) evolves as the light propagates, in contrast to the Lorentz-invariant case where the polarization of light remains fixed when propagating in a vacuum. In the CPT-odd case (d = odd), birefringence causes a simple rotation of the polarization. The CPT-even case (d = even) gives more complicated behavior as linearly polarized light evolves into elliptically polarizations.[9]
The quantity determining the size
of the effect is the change in
relative phase,
,
where
is the difference
in phase speeds,
is the
propagation time, and
is the wavelength.
For
,
the highest sensitivities are achieved
by considering high-energy photons
from distant sources,
giving large values to the ratio
that enhance the sensitivity to
.
The best constraints on vacuum birefringence
from
Lorentz violation come from
polarimetry studies of gamma-ray bursts (GRB).[11][12][13][14]
For example,
sensitivities of 10−38
to the
coefficients for Lorentz violation
have been achieved.
For
, the velocity difference
is proportional to the wavelength,
canceling the
dependence in the phase shift,
implying there is no benefit to
considering higher energies.
As a result, maximum sensitivity is achieved
by studying the most distant source available,
the cosmic microwave background (CMB).
Constraints on
coefficients for
Lorentz violation from the CMB
currently stand at around 10−43 GeV.[15][16][17][18][19][20][21][22][23][24][25][26][27]
Vacuum dispersion
Lorentz violation with can
lead to frequency-dependent light speeds.[9]
To search for this effect,
researchers compare the arrival times
of photons from distant sources
of pulsed radiation, such as GRB or pulsars.
Assuming photons of all energies are
produced within a narrow window of time,
dispersion would cause higher-energy photons
to run ahead or behind lower-energy photons,
leading to otherwise unexplained
energy dependence in the arrival time.
For two photons of two different energies,
the difference in arrival times is approximately
given by the ratio
,
where
is the difference in
the group velocity and
is the distance traveled.
Sensitivity to Lorentz violation is then
increased by considering very distant sources
with rapidly changing time profiles.
The speed difference
grows as
,
so higher-energy sources provide better
sensitivity to effects from
Lorentz violation,
making GRB an ideal source.[9][28][29][30][31][32]
Dispersion may or may not
be accompanied by birefringence.
Polarization studies typically
achieved sensitivities well beyond those
achievable through dispersion.
As a result, most searches for dispersion
focus on Lorentz violation that leads
to dispersion but not birefringence.
The SME shows that dispersion without birefringence
can only arise from operators of even dimension .
Consequently, the energy dependence
in the light speed
from nonbirefringent Lorentz violation
can be quadratic
or quartic
or any other even power of energy.
Odd powers of energy,
such as linear
and cubic
,
do not arise in effective field theory.
Resonant cavities
While extreme sensitivity to Lorentz violation is achieved in astrophysical studies, most forms of Lorentz violation have little to no effect on light propagating in a vacuum. These types of violations cannot be tested using astrophysical tests, but can be sought in laboratory-based experiments involving electromagnetic fields. The primary examples are the modern [[Michelson-Morley experiments]] based on electromagnetic resonant cavities, which have achieved sensitivities on the order of parts in 1018 to Lorentz violation.[33][34][35][36][37][38][39][40][41][42][43][44][45][46]
Resonant cavities support electromagnetic standing waves that oscillate at well-defined frequencies determined by the Maxwell equations and the geometry of the cavity. The Lorentz-violating modifications to the Maxwell equations lead to tiny shifts in the resonant frequencies. Experimenters search for these tiny shifts by comparing two or more cavities at different orientations. Since rotation-symmetry violation is a form of Lorentz violation, the resonant frequencies may depend on the orientation of the cavity. So, two cavities with different orientations may give different frequencies even if they are otherwise identical. A typical experiment compares the frequencies of two identical cavities oriented at right angles in the laboratory. To distinguish between frequency differences of more conventional origins, such as small defects in the cavities, and Lorentz violation, the cavities are typically placed on a turntable and rotated in the laboratory. The orientation dependence from Lorentz violation would cause the frequency difference to change as the cavities rotate.
Several classes of cavity experiment
exist with different sensitivities
to different types of Lorentz violation.
Microwave and optical cavities
have been used to constrain violations.
Microwave experiments have also placed
some bounds on nonminimal
and
violations.
However, for
, the effects of Lorentz
violation grow with frequency,
so optical cavities provide better sensitivity
to nonrenormalizable violations,
all else being equal.
The geometrical symmetries of the cavity also affect
the sensitivity since parity symmetric
cavities are only directly sensitive
to parity-even coefficients for Lorentz violation.
Ring resonators provide a complementary class
of cavity experiment that can test parity-odd violations.
In a ring resonator, two modes propagating in opposites
directions in the same ring are compared, rather than
modes in two different cavities.
Other experiments
A number of other searches for Lorentz violation in photons have been performed that do not fall under the above categories. These include accelerator based experiments,[47][48][49][50] atomic clocks,[51] and threshold analyses.[9][52][53]
The results of experimental searches of Lorentz invariance violation in the photon sector of the SME are summarized in the Data Tables for Lorentz and CPT violation.[54]
See also
- Standard-Model Extension
- Lorentz-violating neutrino oscillations
- Antimatter Tests of Lorentz Violation
- Bumblebee models
- Tests of special relativity
- Test theories of special relativity
External links
References
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