Abstract

We contrast the dynamics of the Horava theory with anisotropic Weyl symmetry with the case when this symmetry is explicitly broken, which is called the kinetic-conformal Horava theory. To do so we perform the canonical formulation of the anisotropic conformal theory at the classical level with a general conformal potential. Both theories have the generator of the anisotropic Weyl transformations as a constraint but it changes from first to second-class when the Weyl symmetry is broken. The FDiff-covariant vector a_i = \partial_i \ln N plays the role of gauge connection for the anisotropic Weyl transformations. A Lagrange multiplier plays also the role of gauge connection, being the time component. The anisotropic conformal theory propagates the same number of degrees of freedom of the kinetic-conformal theory, which in turn are the same of General Relativity. This is due to exchange of a second-class constraint in the kinetic-conformal case by a gauge symmetry in the anisotropic conformal case. An exception occurs if the conformal potential does not depend on the lapse function N, as is the case of the so called Cotton^2 potential, in which case one of the physical modes becomes odd. We develop in detail two explicit anisotropic conformal models. One of them depends on N whereas the other one is the Cotton^2 model. We also study conformally flat solutions in the anisotropic conformal and the kinetic-conformal theories, defining as conformally flat the spatial metric, but leaving for N a form different to the one dictated by the anisotropic Weyl transformations. We find that in both theories these configurations have vanishing canonical momentum and they are critical points of the potential. In the kinetic-conformal theory we find explicitly an exact, nontrivial, conformally flat solution.

Highlights

  • Since the original formulation of the Horava theory in Ref. [1], the anisotropic conformal symmetry introduced in that paper has played an interesting and intriguing role

  • We have contrasted the resulting dynamics with a related formulation, the kinetic-conformal theory, which has the same value of the coupling constant, but the potential is not conformal; the anisotropic Weyl symmetry is explicitly broken

  • We have found important similarities between the dynamics of both theories, on the basis of which we can state that the kinetic-conformal theory “remembers” the anisotropic Weyl symmetry

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Since the original formulation of the Horava theory in Ref. [1], the anisotropic conformal symmetry introduced in that paper has played an interesting and intriguing role (in 2 þ 1 dimensions, these transformations were introduced in Ref. [2]). The kinetic-conformal theory has two additional second-class constraints that are absent in the generic (λ ≠ 1=3) Horava theory; they drop the extra mode. The secondclass constraints are not, in principle, related to gauge symmetries It is worth studying the possible relationship between the anisotropic Weyl transformations, the anisotropic conformal Horava theory, and its kinetic-conformal formulation. It is intriguing that one of the second-class constraints of the kinetic-conformal theory we have mentioned is precisely the generator of the Weyl scalings on the spatial metric. Throughout our analysis, we find interesting geometric structures associated to the anisotropic Weyl transformations Another way to explore the connection between the broken Weyl transformations and the dynamics of the kinetic-conformal theory is to study conformally flat solutions. IV, we study the conformally flat solutions in both formulations of the Horava theory

Anisotropic Weyl transformations
Canonical formulation
N δ δgij d3ypffigffiNV: ð2:31Þ
HAMILTONIAN FORMULATION OF KINETIC-CONFORMAL THEORY
Conformal flatness in Horava theory
Conformally flat solutions in the general kinetic-conformal theory
CONCLUSIONS
Full Text
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