GR predicts no Ricci curvature in vacuum (or at least when we can ignore the cosmological constant). Would theories that violate this lead to observable light dispersion in solar system tests of gravity, or in light lensed around a galaxy?
The field equation for light travelling in curved space-time, $$\nabla^a\nabla_a A_b = {R^a}_b A_a$$ makes it look like there would be dispersion in light propagation when there is non-zero Ricci curvature. The reasoning being that as the frequency increases, the Ricci term become negligible, so maybe it could kind of act like a dispersion term.
So I'm curious:
What are the experimental limits of light dispersion in light travelling long distances through curved space-time?
Can this somehow be transferred to experimental limits on Ricci curvature of empty space?
The Parameterized post-Newtonian formalism is used to test theories of gravity, and provides a formalism for testing how well experiment can constrain to agreement with GR. But it was not clear to me which of the PPN parameters connect to this. Or maybe that is not the correct approach, and deviation from GR here would mean deviation from energy conservation somehow. Regardless, I'd like to know how well we can currently experimentally test the GR prediction that $R_{ab} = 0$ in empty space using measurements on electromagnetic waves.