Quantum Effects on Cosmic Scales as an Alternative to Dark Matter and Dark Energy
Da-Ming Chen, Lin Wang

TL;DR
This paper proposes that quantum effects, specifically the quantum potential energy derived from spin-torsion theory, can explain cosmic phenomena typically attributed to dark matter and dark energy, offering an alternative cosmological model.
Contribution
It develops a scale-dependent quantum spin-torsion theory that accounts for dark matter and dark energy effects without invoking these entities.
Findings
Quantum potential energy mimics dark energy, explaining cosmic acceleration.
QPE accounts for galaxy rotation curves, matching observational data.
The model aligns with supernova luminosity distance-redshift relations.
Abstract
The spin-torsion theory is a gauge theory approach to gravity that expands upon Einstein's general relativity (GR) by incorporating the spin of microparticles. In this study, we further develop the spin-torsion theory to examine spherically symmetric and static gravitational systems that involve free-falling macroscopic particles. We posit that the quantum spin of macroscopic matter becomes noteworthy at cosmic scales. We further assume that the Dirac spinor and Dirac equation adequately capture all essential physical characteristics of the particles and their associated processes. A crucial aspect of our approach involves substituting the constant mass in the Dirac equation with a scale function, allowing us to establish a connection between quantum effects and the scale of gravitational systems. This mechanism ensures that the quantum effect of macroscopic matter is scale-dependent…
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