Introduction to the New Old Cosmology
Back to Normal (Science and Cosmos)
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ナレーター:
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Becky Brabham
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著者:
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Boris Kriger
概要
For half a century, cosmology has relied on two invisible ingredients to explain the universe: dark matter, a substance that has never been detected despite decades of experimental search, and dark energy, a repulsive force whose physical nature remains entirely unknown. Together, they are said to constitute ninety-five percent of the cosmos. The remaining five percent—ordinary atoms, light, everything we have ever touched or measured—is treated as a minor addendum to a universe made mostly of darkness.
This textbook presents a different cosmology. It is not speculative. It does not invent new particles or new forces. It begins with a single observation: the 1967 assumption that the cosmological constant and the quantum vacuum energy are the same thing was never proved. It was simply adopted—and from that untested identification arose the largest quantitative failure in the history of physics, a discrepancy of 120 orders of magnitude.
Remove the assumption, and the crisis dissolves. The vacuum energy—whose existence is experimentally confirmed through the Casimir effect—gravitates locally, inside galaxies and clusters, producing the effects we attributed to dark matter. The cosmological constant governs geometry, not energy. What we call expansion is the passive relaxation of a deformed spacetime membrane toward its flat ground state. Singularities are replaced by finite-density vacuum cores. The cosmic web is not a frozen accident of random initial conditions but the unique fixed point of a self-consistent cycle, determined by a single coupling constant derived from nuclear physics.
The result is a universe that is simpler, more coherent, and more deeply connected than the one we thought we lived in—a self-consistent four-dimensional structure held together not by invisible substances but by the elastic geometry of spacetime and the incompressible memory of the quantum vacuum.
©2026 Boris Kriger (P)2026 Boris Kriger