Do Newton's G and Milgrom's a0 vary with cosmological epoch ?

Abstract

In the scalar tensor gravitational theories Newton's constant GN evolves in the expanding universe. Likewise, it has been speculated that the acceleration scale a0 in Milgrom's modified Newtonian dynamics (MOND) is tied to the scale of the cosmos, and must thus evolve. With the advent of relativistic implementations of the modified dynamics, one can address the issue of variability of the two gravitational ''constants'' with some confidence. Using TeVeS, the Tensor-Vector-Scalar gravitational theory, as an implementation of MOND, we calculate the dependence of GN and a0 on the TeVeS parameters and the coeval cosmological value of its scalar field, φc. We find that GN, when expressed in atomic units, is strictly nonevolving, a result fully consistent with recent empirical limits on the variation of GN. By contrast, we find that a0 depends on φc and may thus vary with cosmological epoch. However, for the brand of TeVeS which seems most promising, a0 variation occurs on a timescale much longer than Hubble's, and should be imperceptible back to redshift unity or even beyond it. This is consistent with emergent data on the rotation curves of disk galaxies at significants redshifts.

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