A Strong Scalar Weak Gravity Conjecture and Some Implications

We propose a new version of the scalar Weak Gravity Conjecture (WGC) which would apply to any scalar field coupled to quantum gravity. For a single scalar it is given by the differential constraint $V''\leq (2V'''^2/V''-V'''')M_{\text{p}}^2$. It corresponds to the statement that self-interactions of a scalar must be stronger than gravity for any value of the scalar field. We find that the solutions which saturate the bound correspond to towers of extremal states with mass $m^2(\phi)=m_0^2/((R/m)^2+1/(nR)^2)$, with $R^2=e^\phi$, consistent with the emergence of an extra dimension at large or small $R$ and the existence of extended objects (strings). These states act as WGC states for the scalar $\phi$. It is also consistent with the distance swampland conjecture with a built-in duality symmetry. From this constraint one can derive several swampland conjectures. In particular one finds that an axion potential is only consistent if $f\leq M_{\text{p}}$. The conjecture has far reaching consequences and applies to several interesting physical systems: i) Among chaotic inflation potentials only those asymptotically linear may survive. ii) If applied to the radion of the circle compactification of the Standard Model to 3D, the constraint implies that the 4D cosmological constant scale must be larger than the mass of the lightest neutrino, which must be Dirac and in normal hierarchy. iii) It also constraints simplest moduli fixing string models. The simplest KKLT model is compatible with the constraints but the latter may be relevant for some choices of parameters.


A Scalar Weak Gravity Conjecture
The Weak Gravity Conjecture (WGC) was first formulated in [1][2][3], see [4] for a recent review and more references. The most widely studied WGC example is the case of a U (1) gauge boson coupled to gravity. It states that there must always exist a charged particle with mass m and charge q such that m ≤ gqM p in the theory. Arguments based on extremal charged back-holes and string theory examples give solid support to this conjecture, which has been generalized to multiple U (1)'s as well as antisymmetric tensor couplings in supergravity and string theory, see ref. [5][6][7][8] for some recent reverences and [4,9] for an introduction.
There are however two options concerning what is the most important physical principle underlying the WGC, either 1) It is something primarily related to black-holes and their stability or rather 2) It is the general principle of gravity being the weakest force which is the crucial point. If the second is true, the consequences would be paramount, since there are many physical instances in which interactions may potentially be weaker than gravity without black-holes playing (at least apparently) any role. In the present paper we want to argue that insisting in gravity being always and in any circumstance the weakest force, may have very important implications if applied to scalar particles.
In this paper we put forward the proposal of a Strong Scalar WGC which is defined by eq.(1.5), corresponding to the statement that the self-interactions of a scalar must be stronger than the gravitational force for all values of the scalar field. This must be true for any scalar in the theory, and not only for a particular set of WGC states. The extremal version of the equation yields a surprise: the solutions are compatible with towers of momenta and winding of an emerging dimension. Those towers become massless for |φ| → ∞, in agreement, with expectations from the swampland distance conjecture [3,4,9]. We interpret these towers as massive solitonic states which appear playing the role of WGC states. This structure is analogous to the behaviour in string theory in which towers of solitonic states (D-branes) become massless or tensionless for large fields. Thus the simplest theory you can think of, a scalar coupled to quantum gravity, secretly contains several features of string theory: emerging extra dimensions, winding strings and duality.

The scalar weak gravity conjecture
The WGC case for purely scalar interactions is not obvious, since clear arguments based on blackhole physics are lacking. Still it has been argued that a variant of the WGC applies to axions with masses replaced by instanton actions and gauge couplings replaced by 1/f , with f the axion decay constant.
For axions the corresponding bound is [1,2,4,5] where S inst is the instanton action. For the theory to be within control one asks for S inst ≥ 1, leading to the constraint f ≤ M p . This is relevant for models of natural inflation in which values for f larger than M p are in general required in order to get appropriate inflation.
Palti formulated a first version of a Scalar Weak Gravity Conjecture (SWGC) in the following terms [10] (see also [11] and [4,12]). We consider a particle H with mass m which is coupled to a light scalar φ with a trilinear coupling proportional to µ = ∂ φ m. Then the conjecture is that, as m φ → 0, The statement is that the force mediated by φ must be stronger than the gravitational force and m 2 (φ) is considered as a function of φ so that m 2 = V . So the above expression may be written as (1.3) Here the particle H acts as a WGC particle in the sense that it is there to guarantee that there is at least one particle with interactions stronger than gravity. The philosophy sounds similar to the WGC for gauge U (1) interactions. However, both situations are apparently very different. In particular the scalar has no charge which could create a blackhole stability problem as with charged fields under a U (1), and the generalization is not obvious.

A Strong scalar WGC
As formulated by Palti, the above bound does not apply to any scalar, but only to WGC scalars which interact with a scalar φ and whose mass is a function of φ. That is for example the case of some string particle (like a lightest KK mode) which depends on the moduli of a compactification. The conjecture does not apply as it stands to the fields φ themselves. With the above expression one finds that the marginal situation for the mass of the WGC scalar H occurs for This gives the expected behaviour which appears in the distance conjecture at large φ [3] (see also [13]).
So this scalar H could be like the first member of a tower. However this exponential behaviour is at odds with the properties of axions, whose potential is periodic and hence inconsistent with eq.(1.3).
Also, the exponential must be e −φ/Mp for large φ but one must change to e φ/Mp for φ → −∞, and there is no single function which includes both behaviours simultaneously. We propose that the above formulated SWGC needs to be modified in such a way that both issues may be circumvented.
Furthermore we will insist that our new SWGC applies to any scalar in the theory. The latter possibility was termed Super SWGC in [10].
We propose the formulation of a Strong version of a Scalar Weak Gravity Conjecture (SSWGC) for the case of a single scalar as follows: i) The potential of any canonically normalized real scalar V (φ) in the theory must verify for any value of the field the constraint: with primes denoting derivation with respect to φ. Compared to eq.(1.3) here there is a new term V associated to the quartic interaction of the scalars. Such a term was not present in the SWGC bound in the previous paragraph because such an interaction among the H fields is not mediated by φ and hence it should not be included. In our case it is different because our condition applies to any scalar, including massive mediators. In our conjecture there are no additional WGC H scalars present in the spectrum to verify a WGC. Rather the states playing that role will be towers of extremal collective objects, as described in section (1.4).
Eq.(1.5) looks like a condition which imposes that the strength of a scalar interaction must always be stronger than gravity. The presence of the quartic term is crucial to obtain the required consistency for the axion potential and is also justified a posteriori by the results in section (1.4). In fact the factors and signs of the terms in the left are crucial in order to obtain the nice results in that section.
We come short of having a Feynman graph explanation for the above differential constraint. One can motivate this expression by considering the short distance behaviour of the potential between two scalars, see fig.(1). At short distances the first term comes from the exchange of the scalar φ, which has the same attractive behaviour than the Newtonian term, V −1/r. The second term includes a direct quartic piece, which is repulsive and proportional to a Dirac delta, hence an UV contribution.
On the other hand, in the IR regime, due to the trilinear coupling being super-renormalizable, the first term gives rise to an effective contact term which is attractive. Thus one cannot factor out a universal distance dependence. In fact eq.(1.5) seems to encapsulate mixed UV and IR effects. This is perhaps not surprising considering the results in section (1.4). The presence of the quartic terms is crucial for the presence of winding states and duality in the emergent dimension.
Before proceeding, some comments about simple potentials are in order: • A linear potential V = aφ + c always verify our SSWGC. This means that the value of |φ| is unconstrained and may be trans-Planckian with no inconsistency.
• A pure quadratic potential V = m 2 φ 2 is special. In this case the condition is violated for any value of φ with m 2 > 0. This may be interpreted as a condition that forbids the existence of massive scalars with no interaction other than gravity. It reminds the U (1) WGC which also states that gauge bosons must have at least one charged particle to interact with.
• For a purely cubic(quartic) potential V = µφ 3 (V = λφ 4 ) the conditions are fulfilled only if An exponential potential of the simple runaway form V = exp(±αφ) passes the test as long as |α| ≥ 1/M 2 p . Note also that the constraint is insensitive to V and V themselves so insensitive to whether the theory is in dS or AdS and the conditions for minima. So the constraints here discussed seem unrelated to the dS conditions of ref. [14][15][16][17][18]. In particular our condition is compatible but independent from the dS conjecture.
The above constraint may be easily generalized to the case of several scalars fields.

A first test: the axion potential
If the SSWGC applies to any scalars, it should apply also to axions and their periodic potentials which we know appear in string theory whenever an axion-like scalar couples to a non-Abelian gauge group. So one may consider the axion example as a test for the conjecture. The leading instanton contribution to the axion potential has the form (1.6) In this case the SSWGC gives (1.7) Here we have constrained ourselves to the region in which V ≥ 0 in which the leading cosine instanton term is expected to dominate. The above expression yields and, since the bound must be true for all φ, one obtains f ≤ M p . So we see we can derive from the SSWGC the condition that the decay constant f of an axion cannot exceed M p [1,2,5]. In the present case this comes about because otherwise the scalar interactions would be weaker than gravitation.

The extremal equation: towers of states and an emerging dimension
We can consider the extremal case for a single scalar in which the scalar interactions equal the gravitational one. Then the constraint may be written as a differential equation on the field dependent mass m 2 (φ): One obtains the extremal solutions for m 2 (with φ in M p units): For this to be a solution one must have B ≥ 0. Concerning A, we chose it positive (otherwise m 2 would always be negative for all φ). Defining a field R = e φ/2 , with kinetic metric 2(dR/R) 2 one can rewrite the above expression in the more suggestive way For N, M = 0 one can also write Here M N,M looks like the spectrum of a string compactification in a circle, with the duality invariance Note also that for large(small) R one gets the limits: For integer N, M this has the structure of towers of winding and momenta becoming light as the scalar φ goes to infinity. Our interpretation is that these towers are the WGC scalars which are required so that gravity keeps on being the weakest force when |φ| goes to infinity. If φ is identified with a modulus, this is precisely the statement in the swampland distance conjecture [3,13,19,20]. Notice also that the extremal solutions know about winding and hence about string theory. This is in agreement with the argument in [9] that the distance conjecture requires the existence of extended objects. Thus towers of quantized momenta and winding from a 5D string compactified on a circle saturate the 4D Strong scalar WGC. This is remarkable, since there is no explicit circle compactification nor winding strings in the original differential equation. A dimension of radius R emerges from the condition of the Strong SWGC conjecture. If this is the case, there should also be an emerging graviphoton under which the momenta are charged, justifying a posteriori choosing N, M integers. Note finally that obviously one could rather identify e φ with a gauge coupling g of the complete theory, in which case as g 2 → 0 a tower of states become massless to preclude the presence of global symmetries in the effective theory.
The argument goes also in the opposite direction. Consider a 4D theory obtained upon compactification of a 5D string theory on a circle. Then the masses of the particles in the KK and winding towers depend on the radion in such a way that their potential verifies the differential equation (1.9).
This gives support to the proposed conjecture and the equation.
Given the above discussion, we propose a second conjecture: ii) In the system of a single canonically normalized scalar field φ coupled to quantum gravity, there are extremal massive states which have a structure corresponding to momenta and winding states of a string compactified in a circle of radius R 2 = e φ , corresponding to an emergent dimension. Those states come in WGC towers which become massless as |φ| → ∞.
Note that the structure is analogous to how the 11-th dimension appears from Type IIA string theory at strong coupling. The analogue of the above extremal states are the towers of D0-branes of string theory building up the KK modes of the 11-th dimension. Thus the simplest system one can think of with a single scalar coupled to quantum gravity secretly has several features characteristic of string theory.

Extremal potentials
Independently of the existence of these towers of states, it is interesting the question of whether one can write down potentials saturating the bound. By integrating V one can obtain general forms of potentials verifying the extremal case in which the inequality is saturated. One finds solutions of the Further integration yields for the extremal potential where Li 2 is the dilogarithm function and i = √ −1. In spite of its complex appearance the potential is real (for real constants). One can see that the first term grows linear with φ as φ → +∞ and is damped exponentially as φ → −∞. This asymptotic linear behavior is in agreement with our comment above that linear potentials always satisfy the differential constraint.
This class of potentials depend on 4 real constants A, B, C, D. For A = 0 one just gets straight lines. For other choices one may get also runaway potentials as well as minima which may be dS, AdS or Minkowski depending on the choice for D. Some simple interesting cases are as follows: fig.2 in blue. The potential is linear at large φ and exponentially decreasing for large negative φ. So this is an example of a runaway potential. fig.2 in red. The potential shows a minimum and behaves linearly for |φ| > M p . This minimum may be in dS or AdS depending on the choice for D.
• iii) Those two cases saturate the bound but are not duality invariant. If however one insists in a duality invariance φ ↔ −φ one has The potential is then symmetric with a minimum at φ = 0. For A = 2, B = 1, C = D = 0 this is depicted in fig.2 in black. This class of potentials is interesting in its own right and may have interesting physical applications e.g. in inflation. In particular, given its asymptotic linear behaviour, it should give rise to a variation of linear inflation.

Constraints on some simple potentials
It is interesting to see what are the constraints for a scalar potential of the form It is easy to see one finds the constraint Note that the term in the right is strongly suppressed by the M −2 p factor, so that in practice (for φ 2 M 2 p ) the constraint amounts to the left hand side being positive. This is automatic for m 2 < 0 and λ positive. This is similar to the situation in the SM. On the other hand for m 2 > 0 the constraint is only obeyed for φ 2 > (2/3)m 2 .
A simple class of SUSY superpotentials is the exponential one, W = e −αM , with M a canonically normalized complex scalar. The condition may be written as (1.20) It is easy to check that this exponential superpotential leads to a potential passing the SSWGC constraint as long as |α| ≥ 1/M 2 p , for any value of M . One can also test a cubic superpotential which may appear in e.g. in string flux compactifications, i.e. (1.21) The differential inequation yields . This is consistent with the idea that gravity must be the weakest force. Let us comment that in fact instead of the global SUSY potential one should have used the N = 1 supergravity potential. However this does not modify the result because the additional terms in the potential have an extra Planck mass supression.

Applications
The above introduced Strong SWGC may have an important impact whenever there is some Planck suppressed scalar interaction with the risk of becoming weaker than gravity. Here we list four important applications leaving a more detailed account for a future publication.

Inflation
We already mentioned that among polynomial potentials, the linear case is the only one that allows for trans-Planckian excursions. So among chaotic inflation models [21] the linear one is singled out as the unique class which can lead to sufficient inflation. As is well known, linear potentials may yield 50-60 e-folds of inflation with tensor perturbations with r 0.07. This relatively large value will soon be experimentally tested. Note that instead of a purely linear potential one may consider e.g. the potential in examples ii) or iii) above which behave linearly for |φ| > M p . It is interesting to note that linear potentials do appear in string theory realizations of monodromy inflation, see [22][23][24][25][26]. There the stability of the potentials against corrections is guaranteed due to shift symmetries. One type of potentials in this class has the form [23] where b is a Type IIB (monodromic) axionic field and we set M p = 1. A simple way to check the validity of the Strong SWGC, Eq (1.5) is by plotting Then eq.(1.5) means χ ≥ 0. We plot in fig.(3)-a that quantity for the above potential with A = 1 and several values of B. We see that the bound seems to be obeyed. In fact one can check that above b 2 the bound is slightly violated at the per-mil label, something not visible in the figure. However we do not have control of the theory to that level and one may say that this model passes the test. There are several other schemes leading to linear potentials which we will not discuss here, see e.g. [23,28].
More generally one may consider monomial potentials of the form V = φ a , a ≥ 0. For them the condition χ ≥ 0 gives (a − 1)(a − 2)M 2 p − φ 2 ≥ 0. For 0 ≤ a < 1 the potential has only tiny violations of the bound at small φ, in the region φ < (a − 1)(a − 2)M p . The same formula applies for a > 2, here the violations are large but are trans-Planckian for a > 2.7. However, for 1 < a ≤ 2 the bound is irremediably violated at all points of field space. Finally, a = 0 and a = 1 are the only pure monomials which satisfy the bound at all points of field space.
Another popular inflaton potential is the Starobinsky model [29,30], which has the general form The same structure appears also in Higgs inflation [31]. In

Constraints on the SM from its 3D compactification
Consider the SM compactified in a circle of radius R down to 3D. This radius is a modulus and has associated a quantum fluctuation field φ with canonical kinetic term given by R = re Here r is any given reference scale to measure R which we set equal to 1 GeV and M 3d p is the 3D Planck mass. Let us concentrate on the deep infrared region, well below the electron threshold, with R 1/m e .
As explained in [32] the 3D one-loop effective potential for R is given by the expression (2.4) The first term comes from the 4D cosmological term Λ 4 after dimensional reduction (and going to the 3D Einstein frame). The second comes from the one-loop Casimir energy associated to the only two massless particles, the photon and the graviton. The factor 4 gives the number of helicity degrees of freedom of those fields. The remaining term is the contribution to the Casimir energy of the three neutrinos compactified with periodic boundary conditions, and is given by Here n νi is the number of helicities for each neutrino (2 for Majorana and 4 for Dirac) and K n are modified Bessel functions of the second kind. This potential is reliable since the contributions from higher thresholds are exponentially suppressed compared to the neutrino contributions by factors of order e −m/mν . It has local minima in AdS if neutrinos are Majorana [32]. This is due to the fact that the lightest neutrino contributes positively to the potential with 2 degrees of freedom, which is not enough to compensate for the 4 bosonic degrees of freedom contributing negatively from photon and graviton. However, if the lightest neutrino is Dirac (and it is lighter than the c.c. scale Λ 1/4 4 ) it contributes positively with 4 (instead of 2) degrees of freedom, which is enough to compensate for the 4 massless degrees of freedom of the photon and the graviton. The potential is then monotonously decreasing for large R and no AdS minima develops. This fact has been used to obtain bounds on the lightest neutrino mass and the 4D cosmological constant [34] by imposing the condition suggested in [35] that AdS non-SUSY vacua are in the swampland (see also [36][37][38]). One obtains four very relevant implications for the SM [34]: • The lightest neutrino is Dirac.
• The 4D c.c. is bounded below by Λ 4 ≥ a(m ν1 ) 4 , with a 1. This is in agreement with the fact that the c.c. scale Λ Here we will show that similar (but not identical) interesting constraints on the SM may be obtained from the Strong SWGC here discussed if extended to 3D. This is very attractive since, for the AdS swampland condition to apply, the AdS minima obtained must be absolutely stable, and this is always difficult to prove (one cannot rule out some instability in the UV). It is important to remark that they are totally independent conjectures. In fact, the AdS criteria forbids Majorana masses while the Strong SWGC allows them. Interestingly, both set very similar bounds for the lightest Dirac neutrino mass. We will show is that unless the lightest Dirac neutrino is sufficiently light, the form of the scalar potential for σ is not consistent with the 3D version of equation (1.5), for some value of R the scalar interaction becomes weaker than gravitation.
We want to check if the effective potential of the SM compactified on a circle verifies Eq. (1.5).
For practical reasons it is useful to define: We can combine this bound with the results in [34,36] to conclude that, if both conjectures are true, the SM with inverse hierarchy would be in the Swampland. Normal hierarchy is therefore another non-trivial prediction that arises from the conjecture. It is interesting that present data already show a slight preference for the normal hierarchy.

Constraints on the SM Higgs mass
Independently of the above 3D constraints on the SM, one can consider possible SSWGC constraints directly in 4D. Here the natural candidate to give rise to interactions weaker than gravity at some scale is the Higgs field. The bound in eq(1.5) is a bound on the mass of a scalar (for all φ). Since the mass is suppressed by a 1/M p factor one may expect that it will trivially be obeyed by any particle physics model. In fact this is not necessarily the case. It may happen that for some particular value of φ the term in the left hand side cancels exactly. In other words, defining one can obtain a bound This means that if, at some finite value of φ, δ(φ) vanishes or is very small, then the bound could be violated, indicating that our model is wrong or incomplete.
In the case of the physical Higgs field H of the SM the above differential equations would have an additional positive term (g 2 1 + g 2 2 ) contributing to δ(H) from the exchange of electroweak gauge bosons. It is known that above the EW region, the potential for the Higgs reaches a maximum at Q max and eventually decreases and becomes negative in a region around Q ins 10 11 − 10 13 GeV, see e.g. [40] and references therein. The maximum turns out to be close to the instability scale Q ins and δ(H) may vanish close to that scale [39]. This would be the signal that either some new physics appear at that point or else one has to modify the SM below Q max so that this zero of the Higgs interaction never appears. In particular, a SUSY version of the SM like e.g. the MSSM may avoid this potential problem. The Higgs potential in the SUSY case is monotonous, with no maxima at any intermediate region developing. Thus SUSY would be here present not to solve the hierarchy problem in the traditional sense (absence of quadratic divergences) but rather to avoid that at any point the Higgs interaction becomes weaker than gravity.
In this connection note that in eq.(2.8) the left hand side is quadratically divergent whereas the right hand side involves only logarithmically divergent quantities. This would be indicating that the usual arguments about to the instability of scalar masses against quantum corrections are at odds with constraints coming from WGC arguments. An analogous observation but in a different context was already made in [41]. We leave a detail study of the numerical effect of our bound on the SM for future work [39].

Moduli fixing in flux string vacua
The scalar potential of string compactification moduli is another instance in which interactions weaker than gravity could appear, since moduli fields have Planck suppressed interactions. Let us consider here as the simplest example the KKLT [42]. In this model one assumes that the complex structure moduli are fixed due to fluxes at a higher scale. One also assumes there is a single Kahler modulus T which also governs the strength of a gaugino condensation superpotential Here W 0 is a constant term induced by the fluxes and the gauge group resides on a set of D7-branes.
The kinetic term is so the field is related to the canonically normalized field φ by σ = T R = e √ 2 3 φ . The conditionχ ≥ 1 is given by a very complicated expression which is a ratio of exponentials and polynomia in T R = σ.
We find that, as long as W 0 is large enough to generate a minimun, the potential verifies the SSWGC at all values of σ. The form of the potential for the parameters given in [42] is shown with a black line in fig.5. The figure in the right shows the ratioχ = δ(σ)/V 2 which should be everywhere bigger than one for the bound from eq.(1.5) to be verified. One sees that the bound is respected for the original parameters in [42]. However for smaller |W 0 | (in blue in the figure) the bound may be violated, although in the cases we have analyzed the potential has no minima. At large σ the largest exponential dominates andχ = 6 so the SSWGC is always verified. It would be interesting to study the constraints in other moduli fixing string models.

Discussion
In this paper we have put forward a scalar version of the WGC. We call it Strong SWGC because we conjecture that it applies to any scalar, and not only to those which may be playing a role as "WGC scalars". The conjectured is summarized by eq.(1.5) which should apply for all values of the field. The constraint may be interpreted as the condition that the strength of the interactions of any two scalars must be bigger than its gravitational interaction. This leads to a number of conclusions which unify and encompass some known swampland conjectures. The axion decay constants are constrained by f ≤ M p . There are extremal solutions leading to an emergent dimension with radius R and masses with a structure m 2 = m 2 0 1/(N R) 2 + (R/M ) 2 , with a duality symmetry built in. The swampland distance conjecture arises at small and large R and requires the existence of extended objects (strings). There are two extra interesting results: i) There cannot be massive scalars without any interaction other than gravity and ii) Among polynomial potentials only the linear one is consistent with the conditions and hence allow for trans-Planckian trips.
The implications of this SSWGC are remarkable for both cosmology and particle physics: 1) In single field chaotic inflation the linear potential is uniquely selected as the only class of potentials in which trans-Planckian trips may take place. This leads to a solid prediction: if large single field inflation is operative, the tensor-to-scalar ratio should be around r = 0.07. Starobinsky or some linear monodromy inflation models need to be corrected to be viable 2) If applied to the 3D radion of the circle compactification of the SM, the SSWGC implies that the lightest Dirac neutrino has a mass bounded above by the c.c. scale, m ν1 Λ 1/4 4 . Combining the results of [34,36] with the results of this work we find that the lightest neutrino must be Dirac and the hierarchy must be normal (not inverted). Furthermore, the bound on the neutrino mass implies a constraint on the Higgs vev (for fixed Yukawa). This would give an understanding of the Higgs stability against quantum corrections in the SM. Somewhat similar SM predictions were in fact already derived in terms of the AdS swampland conjecture of [35] in ref. [34]. However those predictions relied on the stability of the induced AdS 3D potential, which is difficult to establish in the absence of UV information. In the derivation from the SSWGC here considered the information required is purely local and independent from any UV information.
3) The SSWGC may be applied to the Higgs field in the SM, suggesting that new physics should appear at an intermediate scale or below. This would be independent of the traditional argument based on the absence of quadratic divergences, and 4) The SSWGC can be applied to moduli fixing models of string compactification. The simplest KKLT scenario is consistent with the constraints, although the parameters of moduli fixing potentials would be constrained.
Although the conjecture looks very attractive and predictive and it is able to encompass several of the proposed swampland conjectures, further effort should be made to understand its physical origin as coming from a "gravity as the weakest force" condition. In addition, the role of the extremal solutions as towers of solitonic states needs to be understood. The generalization to more complex situations with many scalars is also important. Finally, it would be interesting to find out what is it precisely that goes wrong when the scalar interaction is weaker than gravity. While the WGC for charged particles and gauge bosons is relatively well understood in terms of extremal charged black-holes, its generalization to scalar fields and interactions remains challenging. We hope the present paper may be useful to shed some new light into this question.