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It has recently been argued that there may be a nontrivial four-dimensional limit of the higher-dimensional Gauss-Bonnet and Lovelock interactions and that this might provide a loophole allowing for new four-dimensional gravitational theories, possibly without a standard Lagrangian. We investigate this claim by studying tree-level graviton scattering amplitudes, allowing us to draw conclusions independently of the Lagrangian. By taking four-dimensional limits of higher-dimensional scattering amplitudes of the Gauss-Bonnet theory, we find four-dimensional amplitudes that are different from general relativity; however, these amplitudes are not new since they all come from certain scalar-tensor theories. The nontrivial limit that does not lead to infinite strong coupling around flat space leads to () ^4 theory. We argue that there cannot be any six-derivative purely gravitational four-point amplitudes in any dimension other than those coming from Lovelock theory by directly constructing the on-shell amplitudes. In particular, there can be no new such amplitudes in four dimensions beyond those of general relativity. We also present some new results on the spin-averaged cross section for graviton-graviton scattering in general relativity and Gauss-Bonnet theory in arbitrary dimensions.
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James Bonifacio
Kurt Hinterbichler
Laura A. Johnson
Physical review. D/Physical review. D.
Case Western Reserve University
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Bonifacio et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/6a0eb11f8da6dd046147a596 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevd.102.024029