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Gauging scale symmetry and inflation: Weyl versus Palatini gravity (2007.14733v3)

Published 29 Jul 2020 in hep-th, astro-ph.CO, gr-qc, and hep-ph

Abstract: We present a comparative study of inflation in two theories of quadratic gravity with {\it gauged} scale symmetry: 1) the original Weyl quadratic gravity and 2) the theory defined by a similar action but in the Palatini approach obtained by replacing the Weyl connection by its Palatini counterpart. These theories have different vectorial non-metricity induced by the gauge field ($w_\mu$) of this symmetry. Both theories have a novel spontaneous breaking of gauged scale symmetry, in the absence of matter, where the necessary scalar field is not added ad-hoc to this purpose but is of geometric origin and part of the quadratic action. The Einstein-Proca action (of $w_\mu$), Planck scale and metricity emerge in the broken phase after $w_\mu$ acquires mass (Stueckelberg mechanism), then decouples. In the presence of matter ($\phi_1$), non-minimally coupled, the scalar potential is similar in both theories up to couplings and field rescaling. For small field values the potential is Higgs-like while for large fields inflation is possible. Due to their $R2$ term, both theories have a small tensor-to-scalar ratio ($r\sim 10{-3}$), larger in Palatini case. For a fixed spectral index $n_s$, reducing the non-minimal coupling ($\xi_1$) increases $r$ which in Weyl theory is bounded from above by that of Starobinsky inflation. For a small enough $\xi_1\leq 10{-3}$, unlike the Palatini version, Weyl theory gives a dependence $r(n_s)$ similar to that in Starobinsky inflation, while also protecting $r$ against higher dimensional operators corrections.

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