Exploring the self-tuning of the cosmological constant from Planck mass variation
Daniel Sobral-Blanco, Lucas Lombriser

TL;DR
This paper investigates a self-tuning mechanism for the cosmological constant via Planck mass variation, extending it with additional terms, and explores its implications for inflation, multiverse scenarios, and the coincidence problem.
Contribution
It develops an Einstein-frame formalism, introduces a Gauss-Bonnet extension to prevent graviton loop interference, and connects self-tuning with multiverse and anthropic considerations.
Findings
Self-tuning can be recast in Einstein-frame formalism.
Gauss-Bonnet extension helps maintain vacuum energy degravitation.
The model suggests our universe's epoch is typical for life emergence.
Abstract
Recently, the variation of the Planck mass in the General Relativistic Einstein-Hilbert action was proposed as a self-tuning mechanism of the cosmological constant, preventing Standard Model vacuum energy from freely gravitating and enabling an estimation of the magnitude of its observed value. We explore here new aspects of this proposal. We first develop an equivalent Einstein-frame formalism to the current Jordan-frame formulation of the mechanism and use this to highlight similarities and differences of self-tuning to the sequestering mechanism. We then show how with an extension of the local self-tuning action by a coupled Gauss-Bonnet term and a companion four-form field strength, graviton loops can be prevented from incapacitating the degravitation of the Standard Model vacuum energy. For certain cases, we furthermore find that this extension can be recast as a Horndeski…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCosmology and Gravitation Theories · Earth Systems and Cosmic Evolution · Relativity and Gravitational Theory
