Considering light-matter interactions in the Friedmann equations
V\'aclav Vavry\v{c}uk

TL;DR
This paper proposes a modified cosmological model incorporating light-matter interactions due to cosmic dust opacity, leading to cyclic universe dynamics without dark energy, challenging the standard $\\Lambda$CDM model.
Contribution
It introduces a theoretical framework where cosmic opacity influences the Friedmann equations, resulting in a cyclic universe model that negates the need for dark energy.
Findings
Predicts a cyclic universe with no initial singularity.
Shows cosmic opacity can produce radiation pressure balancing gravity.
Suggests standard cosmology may need revision considering light-matter interactions.
Abstract
Recent observations indicate that the Universe is not transparent but partially opaque due to absorption of light by ambient cosmic dust. This implies that the Friedmann equations valid for the transparent universe must be modified for the opaque universe. The paper studies a scenario when the opacity steeply rises with redshift. In this case, the light-matter interactions become important, because cosmic opacity produces radiation pressure that counterbalances gravitational forces. The presented theoretical model assumes the Universe expanding according to the standard FLRW metric but with the scale factor depending on both types of forces: gravity as well as radiation pressure. The modified Friedmann equations predicts a cyclic expansion/contraction evolution of the Universe within a limited range of scale factors with no initial singularity. The model avoids dark energy and…
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