The birth of the universe in a new G-Theory approach
Alireza Sepehri, Richard Pincak

TL;DR
This paper introduces G-theory, a new framework that explains the universe's origin from nothing, unifies with M-theory, and aligns with cosmological observations by modeling brane dynamics and degrees of freedom.
Contribution
G-theory is proposed as a more complete theory than M-theory, explaining universe creation from nothing and its expansion through brane interactions and degrees of freedom.
Findings
G-theory predicts small slow-roll parameters consistent with observations.
The model aligns with experimental data on tensor-to-scalar ratio.
G-theory suggests extended gravity theories are anomaly free.
Abstract
Recently, Padmanabhan has discussed that the expansion of the cosmic space is due to the difference between the number of degrees of freedom on the boundary surface and the number of degrees of freedom in a bulk region. Now, a natural question arises that how these degrees of freedom are emerged from nothing? We try to address this issue in a new theory which is more complete than M-theory and reduces to it with some limitations. In M-theory, there isn't any stable object like stable M3-branes that our universe is formed on it and for this reason can't help us to explain cosmological events. In this research, we propose a new theory, named G -theory which could be the mother of M-theory and superstring theory. In G-theory, at the beginning, two types of G0-branes, one with positive energy and one with negative energy are produced from nothing in fourteen dimensions. Then, these branes…
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