Non-perturbative effects of vacuum energy on the recent expansion of the universe
Leonard Parker, Alpan Raval

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that quantum vacuum effects of a low-mass field can explain the recent acceleration of the universe's expansion without a cosmological constant, fitting supernova data and predicting an age over 13 billion years.
Contribution
It introduces a non-perturbative quantum vacuum model that accounts for late-time cosmic acceleration without fine-tuning or a cosmological constant.
Findings
Universe transitions from matter-dominated to de Sitter expansion
Model fits supernova data with field mass ~10^{-33} eV
Predicts universe age >13 billion years
Abstract
We show that the vacuum energy of a free quantized field of very low mass can significantly alter the recent expansion of the universe. The effective action of the theory is obtained from a non-perturbative sum of scalar curvature terms in the propagator. We numerically investigate the semiclassical Einstein equations derived from it. As a result of non-perturbative quantum effects, the scalar curvature of the matter-dominated universe stops decreasing and approaches a constant value. The universe in our model evolves from an open matter-dominated epoch to a mildly inflating de Sitter expansion. The Hubble constant during the present de Sitter epoch, as well as the time at which the transition occurs from matter-dominated to de Sitter expansion, are determined by the mass of the field and by the present matter density. The model provides a theoretical explanation of the observed recent…
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