Non Singular Origin of the Universe and the Cosmological Constant Problem (CCP)
E. I. Guendelman

TL;DR
This paper proposes a non-singular origin of the universe using a two-measure theory with a dilaton field, resulting in a stable, zero-vacuum-energy state that explains the universe's creation and current state.
Contribution
It introduces a novel two-measure gravitational theory with a dilaton field that naturally avoids singularities and addresses the cosmological constant problem.
Findings
Effective potential has two flat regions for different dilaton values.
Avoidance of singularities implies a small positive vacuum energy.
Zero vacuum energy acts as a threshold for universe creation.
Abstract
We consider a non singular origin for the Universe starting from an Einstein static Universe in the framework of a theory which uses two volume elements and , where is a metric independent density, also curvature, curvature square terms, first order formalism and for scale invariance a dilaton field are considered in the action. In the Einstein frame we also add a cosmological term that parametrizes the zero point fluctuations. The resulting effective potential for the dilaton contains two flat regions, for relevant for the non singular origin of the Universe and , describing our present Universe. Surprisingly, avoidance of singularities and stability as imply a positive but small vacuum energy as . Zero vacuum energy density for the…
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