Genesis of Dark Energy: Dark Energy as Consequence of Release and Two-stage Tracking Cosmological Nuclear Energy
R. C. Gupta, Anirudh Pradhan

TL;DR
This paper proposes that dark energy originates from nuclear binding energy released during primordial nucleosynthesis, explaining its negative pressure and evolution over cosmic time, aligning with observations.
Contribution
It introduces a novel theory that dark energy results from trapped nuclear binding energy released during primordial nucleosynthesis, providing a new perspective on its nature.
Findings
Estimates align with astrophysical observations
Explains the parameter w = -2/3 for dark energy
Predicts evolution of dark energy parameter over redshift
Abstract
Recent observations on Type-Ia supernovae and low density () measurement of matter including dark matter suggest that the present-day universe consists mainly of repulsive-gravity type `exotic matter' with negative-pressure often said `dark energy' (). But the nature of dark energy is mysterious and its puzzling questions, such as why, how, where and when about the dark energy, are intriguing. In the present paper the authors attempt to answer these questions while making an effort to reveal the genesis of dark energy and suggest that `the cosmological nuclear binding energy liberated during primordial nucleo-synthesis remains trapped for a long time and then is released free which manifests itself as dark energy in the universe'. It is also explained why for dark energy the parameter . Noting that for stiff matter and $w =…
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