Chain Early Dark Energy: Solving the Hubble Tension and Explaining Today's Dark Energy
Katherine Freese, Martin Wolfgang Winkler

TL;DR
This paper introduces Chain Early Dark Energy, a model with multiple phase transitions that addresses the Hubble tension and potentially explains dark energy using a scalar field with a quasiperiodic potential.
Contribution
It proposes a novel Chain EDE model with a series of rapid phase transitions, providing a unified explanation for the Hubble tension and dark energy.
Findings
Chain EDE can reconcile local and CMB measurements of H_0.
The model avoids large CMB anisotropies with over 600 tunneling events.
A scalar field in a quasiperiodic potential naturally explains dark energy.
Abstract
We propose a new model of Early Dark Energy (EDE) as a solution to the Hubble tension in cosmology, the apparent discrepancy between local measurements of the Hubble constant km s Mpc and km s Mpc inferred from the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB). In Chain EDE, the Universe undergoes a series of first order phase transitions, starting at a high energy vacuum in a potential, and tunneling down through a chain of every lower energy metastable minima. As in all EDE models, the contribution of the vacuum energy to the total energy density of the universe is initially negligible, but reaches around matter-radiation equality, before cosmological data require it to redshift away quickly -- at least as fast as radiation. We indeed obtain this required behavior with a series of tunneling events, and show that for …
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Taxonomy
TopicsCosmology and Gravitation Theories · Scientific Research and Discoveries · Dark Matter and Cosmic Phenomena
