Vacuum fluctuations in an ancestor vacuum: A possible dark energy candidate

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Abstract

We consider an open universe created by bubble nucleation, and study possible effects of our "ancestor vacuum," a de Sitter space in which bubble nucleation occurred, on the present universe. We compute vacuum expectation values of the energy-momentum tensor for a minimally coupled scalar field, carefully taking into account the effect of the ancestor vacuum by the Euclidean prescription. We pay particular attention to the so-called supercurvature mode, a non-normalizable mode on a spatial slice of the open universe, which has been known to exist for sufficiently light fields. This mode decays in time most slowly, and may leave residual effects of the ancestor vacuum, potentially observable in the present universe. We point out that the vacuum energy of the quantum field can be regarded as dark energy if mass of the field is of order the present Hubble parameter or smaller. We obtain preliminary results for the dark energy equation of state w(z) as a function of the redshift.

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Aoki, H., Iso, S., Lee, D. S., Sekino, Y., & Yeh, C. P. (2018). Vacuum fluctuations in an ancestor vacuum: A possible dark energy candidate. Physical Review D, 97(4). https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.97.043517

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