Can the apparent expansion of the Universe be attributed to an increasing vacuum refractive index ?
X. Sarazin, F. Couchot, A. Djannati-Atai, M. Urban

TL;DR
This paper explores a model where the universe's apparent expansion results from a time-varying vacuum refractive index, explaining redshift and cosmic microwave background evolution without metric expansion.
Contribution
It develops Dicke's formalism into a flat, static universe model with a changing vacuum index, successfully fitting supernova data and predicting testable atomic energy level shifts.
Findings
Vacuum index increasing with time explains redshift and time dilation.
Model fits supernova data with an exponential vacuum index variation.
Predicted atomic energy level decrease could be experimentally tested.
Abstract
H.A. Wilson, then R.H. Dicke, proposed to describe gravitation by a spatial change of the refractive index of the vacuum around a gravitational mass. Dicke extended this formalism in order to describe the apparent expansion of the Universe by a cosmological time dependence of the global vacuum index. In this paper, we develop Dicke's formalism. The metric expansion in standard cosmology (the time-dependent scale factor of the Friedmann-Lema\^itre curved spacetime metric) is replaced by a flat and static Euclidean metric with a change with time of the vacuum index. We show that a vacuum index increasing with time produces both the cosmological redshift and time dilation, and that the predicted evolution of the energy density of the cosmological microwave background is consistent with the standard cosmology. We then show that the type Ia supernovae data, from the joint SDSS-II and SNLS…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
