Gravitational Cherenkov losses in MOND theories
Abstract
Survival of high-energy cosmic rays (HECRs) against gravitational Cherenkov losses is shown not to cast strong constraints on MOND theories that are compatible with general relativity (GR): theories that coincide with GR in the high-acceleration limit. The energy-loss rate, L, is shown to be many orders smaller than those derived in the literature for theories with no extra scale. The gravitational acceleration produced by a HECR in its vicinity is much higher than the MOND acceleration a0. So, modification to GR, which underlies L, enters only beyond the MOND radius of the particle, within which GR holds sway: rM=sqrt(Gp/c a0). The spectral cutoff, which enters L quadratically, is thus 1/rM, not the particle's, much larger, de Broglie wavenumber: kdB= p/hbar. Thus, L is smaller than published rates, which use kdB, by a factor (rM kdB)2~1039(cp/3.1011Gev)3. With 1/rM as cutoff, the distance a HECR can travel without major losses is q lM, where lM=c2/a0 is the MOND length, and q is a dimensionless function of parameters of the problem. Since lM is ~2 pi times the Hubble distance, survival of HECRs does not strongly constrain GR-compatible, MOND theories. Such theories also easily satisfy existing preferred-frame limits, inasmuch as these limits are gotten in high-acceleration systems. I exemplify the results with MOND adaptations of Einstein-Aether theories.