Disappearing cosmological constant in f(R) gravity
Alexei A. Starobinsky

TL;DR
This paper introduces f(R) gravity models that mimic a cosmological constant in curved space but have a zero cosmological constant in flat space, offering an alternative explanation for cosmic acceleration.
Contribution
The paper proposes a class of viable f(R) gravity models with specific solutions and tests, highlighting their unique feature of a disappearing cosmological constant in flat space.
Findings
Models fit cosmological, Solar system, and laboratory tests.
Potential observational discrepancy in primordial spectrum slope.
Overproduction of scalarons in early Universe.
Abstract
For higher-derivative f(R) gravity where R is the Ricci scalar, a class of models is proposed which produce viable cosmology different from the LambdaCDM one at recent times and satisfy cosmological, Solar system and laboratory tests. These models have both flat and de Sitter space-times as particular solutions in the absence of matter. Thus, a cosmological constant is zero in flat space-time, but appears effectively in a curved one for sufficiently large R. A 'smoking gun' for these models would be small discrepancy in values of the slope of the primordial perturbation power spectrum determined from galaxy surveys and CMB fluctuations. On the other hand, a new problem for dark energy models based on f(R) gravity is pointed which is connected with possible overproduction of new massive scalar particles (scalarons) arising in this theory in the very early Universe.
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