Cosmological Evolution of Vacuum and Cosmic Acceleration
Ali Kaya

TL;DR
This paper investigates how vacuum fluctuations in a Friedmann-Robertson-Walker universe can significantly influence cosmic evolution, showing that regularized vacuum energy can induce positive acceleration and alter the universe's expansion dynamics.
Contribution
It introduces a method to approximate the regularized stress-energy tensor of vacuum fluctuations, revealing their potential to cause cosmic acceleration during early universe stages.
Findings
Vacuum energy density grows to H^4 within one Hubble time.
Vacuum fluctuations can induce positive acceleration of order H^4/M_p^2.
Backreaction of vacuum fluctuations affects early cosmic evolution.
Abstract
It is known that the unregularized expressions for the stress-energy tensor components corresponding to subhorizon and superhorizon vacuum fluctuations of a massless scalar field in a Friedmann-Robertson-Walker background are characterized by the equation of state parameters w=1/3 and w=-1/3, which are not sufficient to produce cosmological acceleration. However, the form of the adiabatically regularized finite stress-energy tensor turns out to be completely different. By using the fact that vacuum subhorizon modes evolve nearly adiabatically and superhorizon modes have w=-1/3, we approximately determine the regularized stress-energy tensor, whose conservation is utilized to fix the time dependence of the vacuum energy density. We then show that vacuum energy density grows from zero up to H^4 in about one Hubble time, vacuum fluctuations give positive acceleration of the order of…
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