Early dark energy from zero-point quantum fluctuations
Michele Maggiore, Lukas Hollenstein, Maud Jaccard, Ermis Mitsou

TL;DR
This paper proposes a cosmological model where dark energy includes a component from zero-point quantum fluctuations, leading to a finite, evolving dark energy density that could address the coincidence problem.
Contribution
It introduces a novel model of early dark energy based on zero-point fluctuations and their interaction with a light scalar field, supported by a likelihood analysis with current observational data.
Findings
The model yields a finite, non-zero dark energy fraction at all times.
It provides a potential solution to the coincidence problem.
Likelihood analysis constrains model parameters with current cosmological data.
Abstract
We examine a cosmological model with a dark energy density of the form , where is the component that accelerates the Hubble expansion at late times and is an extra contribution proportional to . This form of follows from the recent proposal that the contribution of zero-point fluctuations of quantum fields to the total energy density should be computed by subtracting the Minkowski-space result from that computed in the FRW space-time. We discuss theoretical arguments that support this subtraction. By definition, this eliminates the quartic divergence in the vacuum energy density responsible for the cosmological constant problem. We show that the remaining quadratic divergence can be reabsorbed into a redefinition of Newton's constant only under the assumption that the energy-momentum tensor of vacuum fluctuations…
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