Can the zero-point energy of the quantized harmonic oscillator be lower? Possible implications for the physics of "dark energy" and "dark matter"
H. A. Kastrup

TL;DR
This paper explores a topological reformulation of the quantum harmonic oscillator, proposing that its zero-point energy can be significantly lower, with potential implications for understanding dark energy and dark matter in cosmology.
Contribution
It introduces a symplectic spectrum for the harmonic oscillator based on a topologically non-trivial phase space, suggesting lower zero-point energies that could explain dark energy and dark matter phenomena.
Findings
Zero-point energy can be exponentially smaller than traditional estimates.
Symplectic spectra may account for dark energy density.
Lower zero-point energies could lead to dark molecular states during the universe's Dark Ages.
Abstract
Replacing the canonical pair q and p of the harmonic oscillator (HO) by the locally and symplectically equivalent pair angle phi and action variable I implies a qualitative change of the global topological structure of the associated phase spaces: the pair (q,p) is an element of a topologically trivial plane R^2 whereas the pair (phi,I>0) is an element of a topologically non-trivial, infinitely connected, punctured plane R^2-{0}, which has the group SO(1,2) as its "canonical" group. Due to its infinitely many covering groups the resulting ("symplectic") spectrum of the associated quantum Hamiltonian is given by {hbar omega (n+b), n =0,1,...; b in (0,1]}, in contrast to the "orthodox" spectrum {hbar omega (n+1/2)}. The potentially most important implications concern the vibrations of diatomic molecules in the infrared, e.g. those of molecular hydrogen H_2. Those symplectic spectra of…
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