Hamiltonian formalism for f(T) gravity

Ferraro, Rafael; Jose Guzman, Maria

Abstract

We present the Hamiltonian formalism for f(T) gravity, and prove that the theory has n(n-3)/2 + 1 degrees of freedom (d.o.f.) in n dimensions. We start from a scalar-tensor action for the theory, which represents a scalar field minimally coupled with the torsion scalar T that defines the teleparallel equivalent of general relativity (TEGR) Lagrangian. T is written as a quadratic form of the coefficients of anholonomy of the vierbein. We obtain the primary constraints through the analysis of the structure of the eigenvalues of the multi-index matrix involved in the definition of the canonical momenta. The auxiliary scalar field generates one extra primary constraint when compared with the TEGR case. The secondary constraints are the superHamiltonian and supermomenta constraints, that are preserved from the Arnowitt-Deser-Misner formulation of GR. There is a set of n(n-1)/2 of primary constraints that represent the local Lorentz transformations of the theory, which can be combined to form a set of n(n-1)/2-1 first-class constraints, while one of them becomes second class. This result is irrespective of the dimension, due to the structure of the matrix of the brackets between the constraints. The first-class canonical Hamiltonian is modified due to this local Lorentz violation, and the only one local Lorentz transformation that becomes second-class pairs up with the second-class constraint pi approximate to 0 to remove one d.o.f. from the n(2) + 1 pairs of canonical variables. The remaining n(n-1)/2+ 2n - 1 primary constraints remove the same number of d.o.f, leaving the theory with n(n-3)/2+1 d.o.f. This means that f(T) gravity has only one extra d.o.f, which could be interpreted as a scalar d.o.f.

Más información

Título según WOS: ID WOS:000433027800015 Not found in local WOS DB
Título de la Revista: PHYSICAL REVIEW D
Volumen: 97
Número: 10
Editorial: AMER PHYSICAL SOC
Fecha de publicación: 2018
DOI:

10.1103/PhysRevD.97.104028

Notas: ISI