Metric Theories of Gravity and their Astrophysical Implications

<p>The increasing importance of relativistic gravity in astrophysics has led to the need for a detailed analysis of theories of gravity and their viability. Accordingly, in this thesis, metric theories of gravity are compiled, and are classified into four groups: (i) general relativity (ii) s...

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Main Author: Ni, Wei-Tou
Format: Others
Published: 1973
Online Access:https://thesis.library.caltech.edu/10395/1/Ni_w-t_1973.pdf
Ni, Wei-Tou (1973) Metric Theories of Gravity and their Astrophysical Implications. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/MCQM-3M81. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:08282017-154628547 <https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:08282017-154628547>
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spelling ndltd-CALTECH-oai-thesis.library.caltech.edu-103952019-12-22T03:10:07Z Metric Theories of Gravity and their Astrophysical Implications Ni, Wei-Tou <p>The increasing importance of relativistic gravity in astrophysics has led to the need for a detailed analysis of theories of gravity and their viability. Accordingly, in this thesis, metric theories of gravity are compiled, and are classified into four groups: (i) general relativity (ii) scalar-tensor theories (iii) conformally flat theories and (iv) stratified theories. The post-Newtonian limit of each theory is constructed and its Parametrized Post-Newtonian (PPN) values are obtained. These results, when combined with experimental data and with recent work by Nordtvedt and Will, show that, of all theories thus far examined by our group, the only currently viable ones are (i) general relativity, (ii) the Bergmann-Wagoner scalar-tensor theory and its special cases (Nordtvedt; Brans-Dicke-Jordan, (iii) recent, (as yet unpublished ) vector-tensor theory by Nordtvedt, Hellings, and Will, and (iv) a new stratified theory by the author, which is presented for the first time in this thesis.</p> <p>The PPN formalism is used to analyze stellar stability in any metric theory of gravity. This analysis enables one to infer, for any given gravitation theory, the extent to which post-Newtonian effects induce instabilities in white dwarfs, in neutron stars, and in supermassive stars. It also reveals the extent to which our current empirical knowledge of post-Newtonian gravity (based on solar-system experiments) actually guarantees that relativistic instabilities exist. In particular, it shows that for "conservative theories of gravity", current solar-system experiments gua­rantee that relativistic corrections do induce dynamical instabilities in stars with adiabatic indices slightly greater than 4/3, while for "non-conservative theories", current experiments do not permit any firm conclusion. </p> 1973 Thesis NonPeerReviewed application/pdf https://thesis.library.caltech.edu/10395/1/Ni_w-t_1973.pdf https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:08282017-154628547 Ni, Wei-Tou (1973) Metric Theories of Gravity and their Astrophysical Implications. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/MCQM-3M81. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:08282017-154628547 <https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:08282017-154628547> https://thesis.library.caltech.edu/10395/
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format Others
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description <p>The increasing importance of relativistic gravity in astrophysics has led to the need for a detailed analysis of theories of gravity and their viability. Accordingly, in this thesis, metric theories of gravity are compiled, and are classified into four groups: (i) general relativity (ii) scalar-tensor theories (iii) conformally flat theories and (iv) stratified theories. The post-Newtonian limit of each theory is constructed and its Parametrized Post-Newtonian (PPN) values are obtained. These results, when combined with experimental data and with recent work by Nordtvedt and Will, show that, of all theories thus far examined by our group, the only currently viable ones are (i) general relativity, (ii) the Bergmann-Wagoner scalar-tensor theory and its special cases (Nordtvedt; Brans-Dicke-Jordan, (iii) recent, (as yet unpublished ) vector-tensor theory by Nordtvedt, Hellings, and Will, and (iv) a new stratified theory by the author, which is presented for the first time in this thesis.</p> <p>The PPN formalism is used to analyze stellar stability in any metric theory of gravity. This analysis enables one to infer, for any given gravitation theory, the extent to which post-Newtonian effects induce instabilities in white dwarfs, in neutron stars, and in supermassive stars. It also reveals the extent to which our current empirical knowledge of post-Newtonian gravity (based on solar-system experiments) actually guarantees that relativistic instabilities exist. In particular, it shows that for "conservative theories of gravity", current solar-system experiments gua­rantee that relativistic corrections do induce dynamical instabilities in stars with adiabatic indices slightly greater than 4/3, while for "non-conservative theories", current experiments do not permit any firm conclusion. </p>
author Ni, Wei-Tou
spellingShingle Ni, Wei-Tou
Metric Theories of Gravity and their Astrophysical Implications
author_facet Ni, Wei-Tou
author_sort Ni, Wei-Tou
title Metric Theories of Gravity and their Astrophysical Implications
title_short Metric Theories of Gravity and their Astrophysical Implications
title_full Metric Theories of Gravity and their Astrophysical Implications
title_fullStr Metric Theories of Gravity and their Astrophysical Implications
title_full_unstemmed Metric Theories of Gravity and their Astrophysical Implications
title_sort metric theories of gravity and their astrophysical implications
publishDate 1973
url https://thesis.library.caltech.edu/10395/1/Ni_w-t_1973.pdf
Ni, Wei-Tou (1973) Metric Theories of Gravity and their Astrophysical Implications. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/MCQM-3M81. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:08282017-154628547 <https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:08282017-154628547>
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