Dark Energy: The Shadowy Reflection of Dark Matter?
Kostas Kleidis, Nikolaos K. Spyrou

TL;DR
This paper proposes a cosmological model where dark matter's internal energy mimics dark energy effects, explaining universe acceleration or deceleration without introducing a separate dark energy component.
Contribution
It introduces a novel approach where dark matter's internal motions account for cosmic acceleration, challenging the need for dark energy in cosmological models.
Findings
The model aligns with supernovae Type Ia observations.
It addresses the age and coincidence problems.
It can explain both accelerating and decelerating universe scenarios.
Abstract
In this article, we review a series of recent theoretical results regarding a conventional approach to the dark energy (DE) concept. This approach is distinguished among others for its simplicity and its physical relevance. By compromising General Relativity (GR) and Thermodynamics at cosmological scale, we end up with a model without DE. Instead, the Universe we are proposing is filled with a perfect fluid of self-interacting dark matter (DM), the volume elements of which perform hydrodynamic flows. To the best of our knowledge, it is the first time in a cosmological framework that the energy of the cosmic fluid internal motions is also taken into account as a source of the universal gravitational field. As we demonstrate, this form of energy may compensate for the DE needed to compromise spatial flatness, while, depending on the particular type of thermodynamic processes occurring in…
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