Einstein, Planck and Vera Rubin: relevant encounters between the Cosmological and the Quantum Worlds
Paolo Salucci, Giampiero Esposito, Gaetano Lambiase, Emmanuele, Battista, Micol Benetti, Donato Bini, Lumen Boco, Gauri Sharma, Valerio, Bozza, Luca Buoninfante, Antonio Capolupo, Salvatore Capozziello, Giovanni, Covone, Rocco D'Agostino, Mariafelicia DeLaurentis

TL;DR
This review explores the complex interplay between cosmology, quantum physics, and dark matter, highlighting how interdisciplinary contamination may lead to new physics insights into the dark matter mystery.
Contribution
It synthesizes diverse interdisciplinary approaches and suggests that contamination between fields can guide us toward understanding dark matter and new physics.
Findings
Interdisciplinary contamination offers new pathways to dark matter understanding.
Quantum and cosmological phenomena are deeply entangled in dark matter research.
Potential links between quantum gravity, exotic particles, and dark matter are identified.
Abstract
In Cosmology and in Fundamental Physics there is a crucial question like: where the elusive substance that we call Dark Matter is hidden in the Universe and what is it made of?, that, even after 40 years from the Vera Rubin seminal discovery does not have a proper answer. Actually, the more we have investigated, the more this issue has become strongly entangled with aspects that go beyond the established Quantum Physics, the Standard Model of Elementary particles and the General Relativity and related to processes like the Inflation, the accelerated expansion of the Universe and High Energy Phenomena around compact objects. Even Quantum Gravity and very exotic DM particle candidates may play a role in framing the Dark Matter mystery that seems to be accomplice of new unknown Physics. Observations and experiments have clearly indicated that the above phenomenon cannot be considered as…
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