Antimatter Gravity Experiments, the Astronomical Challenges to Lambda-CDM Cosmology and the Quantum Vacuum as a Possible Source of Gravity in the Universe
Dragan S Hajdukovic

TL;DR
This review discusses recent antimatter gravity experiments suggesting anti-atoms may experience different gravity than matter, and explores how quantum vacuum fluctuations could be a major source of gravity, challenging standard cosmology.
Contribution
It introduces the hypothesis that quantum vacuum fluctuations are virtual gravitational dipoles, potentially explaining gravity without dark matter or dark energy, supported by recent experimental and astronomical challenges.
Findings
ALPHA-g experiment indicates anti-atoms may have 0.75 gravity of matter
Quantum vacuum fluctuations could be a major gravity source
Astronomical challenges support alternative cosmological models
Abstract
This review is motivated by the first result of the ALPHA-g experiment at CERN, which indicates that atoms and anti-atoms have different gravitational charges; according to measurements, the gravitational acceleration of anti-atoms is only 0.75 of that of ordinary matter. If confirmed by more precise measurements, this will greatly increase the plausibility of the emerging cosmological model, which is based on the working hypothesis that quantum vacuum fluctuations are virtual gravitational dipoles; a hypothesis that opens up the possibility that the quantum vacuum is a major source of gravity in the universe (which could eventually eliminate the need for the hypothetical dark matter and dark energy). This laboratory challenge to general relativity and Lambda-CDM cosmology is complemented by astronomical challenges (the Hubble tension, very fast initial growth of structures in the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCosmology and Gravitation Theories · Relativity and Gravitational Theory
