Cosmic clocks, cosmic variance and cosmic averages
David L. Wiltshire

TL;DR
This paper proposes a new general relativistic explanation for cosmic acceleration, attributing it to gravitational energy differences and inhomogeneities, leading to a viable cosmological model that aligns with observations without dark energy.
Contribution
It introduces a novel averaging approach and nonlinear evolution scheme that account for gravitational energy differences, resolving key cosmological paradoxes and anomalies.
Findings
Cosmic acceleration explained without dark energy.
Revised age of the universe increases structure formation time.
CMB anisotropy spectrum fits the new model despite negative spatial curvature.
Abstract
Cosmic acceleration is explained quantitatively, purely in general relativity, as an apparent effect due to quasilocal gravitational energy differences that arise in the decoupling of bound systems from the global expansion of the universe. "Dark energy" is recognised as a misidentification of those aspects of gravitational energy which by virtue of the equivalence principle cannot be localised, namely gradients in the energy associated with the expansion of space and spatial curvature variations in an inhomogeneous universe, as we observe. Gravitational energy differences between observers in bound systems, such as galaxies, and volume-averaged comoving locations within voids in freely expanding space can be so large that the time dilation between the two significantly affects the parameters of any effective homogeneous isotropic model one fits to the universe. A new approach to…
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