The QCD nature of Dark Energy
Federico R. Urban, Ariel R. Zhitnitsky

TL;DR
This paper proposes that dark energy originates from QCD effects in an expanding universe, specifically involving the Veneziano ghost, providing a model where dark energy arises naturally from known physics without new fields.
Contribution
It demonstrates how the low-energy QCD sector, especially the Veneziano ghost, can account for dark energy in an expanding universe, linking QCD parameters to cosmological vacuum energy.
Findings
Dark energy density can be derived from QCD parameters and the Hubble constant.
The Veneziano ghost becomes a physical degree of freedom in an expanding universe.
The model predicts a time-dependent equation of state for dark energy.
Abstract
The origin of the observed dark energy could be explained entirely within the standard model, with no new fields required. We show how the low-energy sector of the chiral QCD Lagrangian, once embedded in a non-trivial spacetime, gives rise to a cosmological vacuum energy density which can be can be presented entirely in terms of QCD parameters and the Hubble constant as . In this work we focus on the dynamics of the ghost fields that are essential ingredients of the aforementioned Lagrangian. In particular, we argue that the Veneziano ghost, being unphysical in the usual Minkowski QFT, becomes a physical degree of freedom if the universe is expanding. As an immediate consequence, all relevant effects are naturally very small as they are proportional to the rate of expansion $H/ \Lqcd \sim…
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