
TL;DR
This paper proposes that antimatter in cosmic voids causes gravitational repulsion, potentially explaining cosmic acceleration and local galaxy motions without dark energy, challenging standard cosmological models.
Contribution
It introduces a novel dark repulsor hypothesis where antimatter in voids accounts for cosmic acceleration and local dynamics, offering an alternative to dark energy.
Findings
Antimatter in voids could have mass comparable to superclusters.
Repulsive gravity from antimatter explains local galaxy motions.
This mechanism can drive cosmic acceleration without dark energy.
Abstract
The unexpected discovery of the accelerated cosmic expansion in 1998 has filled the Universe with the embarrassing presence of an unidentified "dark energy", or cosmological constant, devoid of any physical meaning. While this standard cosmology seems to work well at the global level, improved knowledge of the kinematics and other properties of our extragalactic neighborhood indicates the need for a better theory. We investigate whether the recently suggested repulsive-gravity scenario can account for some of the features that are unexplained by the standard model. Through simple dynamical considerations, we find that the Local Void could host an amount of antimatter () roughly equivalent to the mass of a typical supercluster, thus restoring the matter-antimatter symmetry. The antigravity field produced by this "dark repulsor" can explain the anomalous…
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