Renormalizing the vacuum energy in cosmological spacetime: implications for the cosmological constant problem
Cristian Moreno-Pulido, Joan Sola Peracaula

TL;DR
This paper computes the vacuum energy in cosmological spacetime using adiabatic renormalization, revealing a dynamical vacuum consistent with the running vacuum model, which could explain inflation and the smallness of the cosmological constant.
Contribution
It introduces a novel off-shell adiabatic renormalization approach to derive a smooth, dynamical vacuum energy density compatible with observations, avoiding fine-tuning issues.
Findings
Vacuum energy density depends on powers of the Hubble rate and its derivatives.
Higher powers like H^6 could drive early universe inflation.
The vacuum equation of state is mildly dynamical, not exactly -1.
Abstract
The renormalization of the vacuum energy in quantum field theory (QFT) is usually plagued with theoretical conundrums related not only with the renormalization procedure itself, but also with the fact that the final result leads usually to very large (finite) contributions incompatible with the measured value of in cosmology. Herein, we compute the zero-point energy (ZPE) for a nonminimally coupled (massive) scalar field in FLRW spacetime using the off-shell adiabatic renormalization technique employed in previous work. The general off-shell result yields a smooth function made out of powers of the Hubble rate and/or of its time derivatives involving different (even) adiabatic orders (, i.e. it leads, remarkably enough, to the running vacuum model (RVM) structure. We have verified the same result from the effective action…
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