Dark Matter and Dark Energy as Effects of Quantum Gravity
Max I. Fomitchev

TL;DR
This paper proposes a quantum gravity theory based on gravitational energy fluctuations that explains dark matter and dark energy effects without invoking unseen matter, aligning with observations across various cosmic structures.
Contribution
The theory introduces a graviton scattering force that explains dark matter phenomena and naturally accounts for dark energy and inflation, differing from and improving upon existing models like MOND and CDM.
Findings
Matches observed M/L ratios in galaxies and clusters
Explains the tilt of the Fundamental Plane of ellipticals
Accounts for primordial inflation and dark energy as quantum gravity effects
Abstract
I present a theory of quantum gravity based on the principle of gravitational energy fluctuations. Gravitational energy fluctuations -- gravitons -- are responsible for elastic scattering of subatomic particles. Such scattering corresponds to complimentary force -- graviton scattering force -- arising in gravitational interaction in addition to Newtonian gravity. The strength of the graviton scattering force is proportional to the graviton scattering probability. Unlike Newtonian gravity the graviton scattering force follows the 1/r law and dominates the former on cosmological scale in the limit of low orbital accelerations. Similarly to Modified Newtonian Dynamics the quantum gravity accounts for variations in observed M/L ratios of diverse stellar systems ranging from dwarf spheroid galaxies to X-ray galaxy clusters without requiring an invisible matter (which is still required by…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDark Matter and Cosmic Phenomena · Relativity and Gravitational Theory · Cosmology and Gravitation Theories
