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Prospect on constraining environment-dependent dilaton model from gravitational redshift measurements
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Scalar-tensor gravity represents a natural extension of general relativity. This paper investigates a conformal scalar-tensor gravity, the environmentally dependent dilaton model, and identifies regions of its parameter space potentially constrained by future experiments using atomic clocks to measure gravitational redshift. We propose an experimental scheme in which atomic clocks are placed in environments of different mass densities, such as ultrahigh vacuum, water, or osmium, and their frequency shifts are compared to probe the scalar field contribution to gravitational redshift. By further modeling the mass distribution in low-density environments with a discrete representation, we go beyond the standard continuous approximation. Despite limitations inherent to specific experimental configurations, our analysis reveals that a significant portion of the parameter space remains accessible. Importantly, the accessible regions are complementary to those constrained by existing tests, as they are primarily sensitive to relatively weak couplings. Consequently, high-precision gravitational redshift experiments hold the potential to exclude significant regions of this parameter space in the future.
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