I have followed this reference
The Weinberg-Witten theorem states that a theory containing a Poincaré covariant conserved tensor $T_{\mu\nu}$ forbids massless particles of spin $j > 1$ for which
$P_\nu = \int T_{0\nu}3x$ is the conserved energy-momentum four-vector.
Consider a composite graviton made of $2$ particles of spin $1$.
Each of the spin-$1$ particles will be possibly have a non-vanishing charge current, in this case the Poincaré covariant conserved tensor $T_{\mu\nu}$ (this is authorized for a spin-$1$ particle)
But this means that the composite graviton, being the "sum" of these 2 spin-1 particles, will have also a non-vanishing Poincaré covariant conserved tensor $T_{\mu\nu}$
But this is forbidden by the Weinberg-Witten theorem, because the spin of the graviton is 2.
So the graviton cannot be a composite particle.
In the full General Relativity, the covariant stress-energy tensor $T_{\mu\nu}$ is not conserved, and the conserved stress-energy quantity $(T_{\mu\nu} + \tau_{\mu\nu})$, is not a full covariant tensor.
If we linearized the Einstein equation, so as to have a conserved stress-energy tensor, we have:
$$(G_{\mu\nu})_{linearized} = \chi [(T_{\mu\nu} + \tau_{\mu\nu})] $$
The gauge symmetries, for the linear graviton as :
$$h_{\mu\nu} \rightarrow h_{\mu\nu} + \partial_\mu \phi_\nu + \partial_\nu \phi_\mu$$
and could be interpreted as "linear diffeomorphisms".
But in fact, the $\tau_{\mu\nu}$ term is not invariant, by the gauge symmetry, so the full conserved stress-energy quantity $(T_{\mu\nu} + \tau_{\mu\nu})$ is not gauge-invariant, and so we escape from the Weinberg-Witten theorem.
This post imported from StackExchange Physics at 2014-12-18 14:21 (UTC), posted by SE-user Trimok