Cosmological constant vis-a-vis dynamical vacuum: bold challenging the $\Lambda$CDM
Joan Sola

TL;DR
This paper reviews the historical and observational context of the cosmological constant, arguing that dynamical vacuum models like RVMs are increasingly favored over the traditional constant $\Lambda$CDM model, with significant empirical support.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive review of observational evidence supporting dynamical vacuum models over the constant $\Lambda$ assumption, highlighting recent statistical favorability.
Findings
Dynamical vacuum models are favored at ~4σ over $\Lambda$CDM.
Observational data supports $\Lambda(H)$ models as a better fit.
Implications for fundamental constants' evolution are discussed.
Abstract
Next year we will celebrate 100 years of the cosmological term, , in Einstein's gravitational field equations, also 50 years since the cosmological constant problem was first formulated by Zeldovich, and almost about two decades of the observational evidence that a non-vanishing, positive, -term could be the simplest phenomenological explanation for the observed acceleration of the Universe. This mixed state of affairs already shows that we do no currently understand the theoretical nature of . In particular, we are still facing the crucial question whether is truly a fundamental constant or a mildly evolving dynamical variable. At this point the matter should be settled once more empirically and, amazingly enough, the wealth of observational data at our disposal can presently shed true light on it. In this short review I summarize the situation of…
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