Non Singular Origin of the Universe and its Present Vacuum Energy Density
E. I. Guendelman

TL;DR
This paper proposes a non-singular universe origin model using a two-measure theory with spontaneous symmetry breaking, resulting in a stable emergent universe scenario with a small vacuum energy density.
Contribution
It introduces a novel two-measure framework with spontaneous scale invariance breaking, generating a potential with two flat regions for modeling universe emergence and current acceleration.
Findings
A stable emergent universe solution exists within a specific vacuum energy range.
The model naturally explains a small present vacuum energy without extreme fine-tuning.
The effective potential features two flat regions corresponding to different universe phases.
Abstract
We consider a non singular origin for the Universe starting from an Einstein static Universe, the so called "emergent universe" scenario, in the framework of a theory which uses two volume elements and , where is a metric independent density, used as an additional measure of integration. Also curvature, curvature square terms and for scale invariance a dilaton field are considered in the action. The first order formalism is applied. The integration of the equations of motion associated with the new measure gives rise to the spontaneous symmetry breaking (S.S.B) of scale invariance (S.I.). After S.S.B. of S.I., it is found that a non trivial potential for the dilaton is generated. In the Einstein frame we also add a cosmological term that parametrizes the zero point fluctuations. The resulting effective potential for the dilaton contains…
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