Abstract

Recently, it has been argued that application of the Weak Gravity Conjecture (WGC) to spin-2 fields implies a universal upper bound on the cutoff of the effective theory for a single spin-2 field. We point out here that these arguments are largely spurious, because of the absence of states carrying spin-2 Stuckelberg $U(1)$ charge, and because of incorrect scaling assumptions. Known examples such as Kaluza-Klein theory that respect the usual WGC do so because of the existence of a genuine $U(1)$ field under which states are charged, as in the case of the Stuckelberg formulation of spin-1 theories, for which there is an unambiguously defined $U(1)$ charge. Theories of bigravity naturally satisfy a naive formulation of the WGC, $M_W< M_{\rm Pl}$, since the force of the massless graviton is always weaker than the massive spin-2 modes. It also follows that theories of massive gravity trivially satisfies this form of the WGC. We also point out that the identification of a massive spin-2 state in a truncated higher derivative theory, such as Einstein-Weyl-squared or its supergravity extension, bears no relationship with massive spin-2 states in the UV completion, contrary to previous statements in the literature. We also discuss the conjecture from a swampland perspective and show how the emergence of a universal upper bound on the cutoff relies on strong assumptions on the scale of the couplings between the spin-2 and other fields, an assumption which is known to be violated in explicit examples.

Highlights

  • The prevailing tool of modern physics is that of effective field theories (EFTs)

  • IV, but those are genuine implementations of the weak gravity conjecture (WGC) onto the Uð1ÞB sector and have very little to do with the existence of a massive spin-2 field and have certainly nothing to do with the implementation of the WGC on the massive spin-2 EFT

  • The WGC applied to the force exchanged by the helicity-1 states does not appear to give anything definitive, and neither should it be since there is no physical content in separating out the contribution from that mode

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

The prevailing tool of modern physics is that of effective field theories (EFTs). Given an assumed hierarchy of scales, EFTs provide a complete description of the lowenergy dynamics to arbitrary order in an expansion in E=Λ where Λ denotes the scale of high-energy physics. This is why in all known weakly coupled UV completions, such as string theory, the spin-2 state is part of an infinite tower of excitations This argument does not in itself forbid a mass-gap between the spin-2 and higher states which would be sufficient to derive a low-energy EFT.

Helicity-1 mode of a massive spin-2 field
The case of a “fake” Uð1ÞA
The case of a genuine Uð1ÞB
Absence of charges for static sources
Scaling the interactions
Gravity as the weakest force
SWAMPLAND CONJECTURES FOR SPIN-2 FROM EMERGENCE
Dimensionless coupling constants
Swampland conjectures in unitary gauge
Kaluza-Klein theory
Modding out the circle
Bigravity and massive gravity
M2f ð4:16Þ
Higher derivative gravity
Cutoff of truncated expansion vs mass of integrated mode
String theory example
Nonlinear massive gravity
A UV completion of massive gravity and bigravity
DISCUSSION

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