Literature DB >> 28106446

Exacerbating the Cosmological Constant Problem with Interacting Dark Energy Models.

M C David Marsh1.   

Abstract

Future cosmological surveys will probe the expansion history of the Universe and constrain phenomenological models of dark energy. Such models do not address the fine-tuning problem of the vacuum energy, i.e., the cosmological constant problem (CCP), but can make it spectacularly worse. We show that this is the case for "interacting dark energy" models in which the masses of the dark matter states depend on the dark energy sector. If realized in nature, these models have far-reaching implications for proposed solutions to the CCP that require the number of vacua to exceed the fine-tuning of the vacuum energy density. We show that current estimates of the number of flux vacua in string theory, N_{vac}∼O(10^{272 000}), are far too small to realize certain simple models of interacting dark energy and solve the cosmological constant problem anthropically. These models admit distinctive observational signatures that can be targeted by future gamma-ray observatories, hence making it possible to observationally rule out the anthropic solution to the cosmological constant problem in theories with a finite number of vacua.

Year:  2017        PMID: 28106446     DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.118.011302

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Phys Rev Lett        ISSN: 0031-9007            Impact factor:   9.161


  1 in total

1.  Four direct measurements of the fine-structure constant 13 billion years ago.

Authors:  Michael R Wilczynska; John K Webb; Matthew Bainbridge; John D Barrow; Sarah E I Bosman; Robert F Carswell; Mariusz P Dąbrowski; Vincent Dumont; Chung-Chi Lee; Ana Catarina Leite; Katarzyna Leszczyńska; Jochen Liske; Konrad Marosek; Carlos J A P Martins; Dinko Milaković; Paolo Molaro; Luca Pasquini
Journal:  Sci Adv       Date:  2020-04-24       Impact factor: 14.136

  1 in total

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