Dark Energy and Its Implications for Gravity
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Date
2009-03-03
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American Scientific Publishers
Abstract
The cosmological constant is the most economical candidate for dark energy. No other approach really alleviates
the difficulties faced by the cosmological constant because, in all other attempts to model the dark energy,
one still has to explain why the bulk cosmological constant (treated as a low-energy parameter in the action
principle)is zero. I argue that the until the theory is made invariant under the shifting of the Lagrangian by a
constant, one cannot obtain a satisfactory solution to the cosmological constant problem. This is impossible
in any generally covariant theory with the conventional low-energy matter action, if the metric is varied in the
action to obtain the field equations. I review an alternative perspective in which gravity arises as an emergent,
long wavelength phenomenon, and can be described in terms of an effective theory using an action associated
with null vectors in the spacetime. This action is explicitly invariant under the shift of the energy momentum
tensor Tab → Tab+Ʌgab and any bulk cosmological constant can be gauged away. Such an approach seems
to be necessary for addressing the cosmological constant problem and can easily explain why its bulk value is zero. I describe some possibilities for obtaining the observed value from quantum gravitational fluctuations.
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Keywords
Dark energy and gravity, Quantum gravitational fluctuations, Cosmological constant