Fermi Degenerate Antineutrino Star Model of Dark Energy

When the Large Hadron Collider resumes operations in 2021, several experiments will directly measure the motion of antihydrogen in free fall for the first time. Our current understanding of the universe is not yet fully prepared for the possibility that antimatter has negative gravitational mass. Th...

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Main Author: Tom F. Neiser
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hindawi Limited 2020-01-01
Series:Advances in Astronomy
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2020/8654307
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spelling doaj-160205e229b8478ca4f5781f3b80fff42020-11-25T02:51:08ZengHindawi LimitedAdvances in Astronomy1687-79691687-79772020-01-01202010.1155/2020/86543078654307Fermi Degenerate Antineutrino Star Model of Dark EnergyTom F. Neiser0Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of California, Los Angeles, CA 90095, USAWhen the Large Hadron Collider resumes operations in 2021, several experiments will directly measure the motion of antihydrogen in free fall for the first time. Our current understanding of the universe is not yet fully prepared for the possibility that antimatter has negative gravitational mass. This paper proposes a model of cosmology, where the state of high energy density of the big bang is created by the collapse of an antineutrino star that has exceeded its Chandrasekhar limit. To allow the first neutrino stars and antineutrino stars to form naturally from an initial quantum vacuum state, it helps to assume that antimatter has negative gravitational mass. This assumption may also be helpful to identify dark energy. The degenerate remnant of an antineutrino star can today have an average mass density that is similar to the dark energy density of the ΛCDM model. When in hydrostatic equilibrium, this antineutrino star remnant can emit isothermal cosmic microwave background radiation and accelerate matter radially. This model and the ΛCDM model are in similar quantitative agreement with supernova distance measurements. Therefore, this model is useful as a purely academic exercise and as preparation for possible future discoveries.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2020/8654307
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tom F. Neiser
spellingShingle Tom F. Neiser
Fermi Degenerate Antineutrino Star Model of Dark Energy
Advances in Astronomy
author_facet Tom F. Neiser
author_sort Tom F. Neiser
title Fermi Degenerate Antineutrino Star Model of Dark Energy
title_short Fermi Degenerate Antineutrino Star Model of Dark Energy
title_full Fermi Degenerate Antineutrino Star Model of Dark Energy
title_fullStr Fermi Degenerate Antineutrino Star Model of Dark Energy
title_full_unstemmed Fermi Degenerate Antineutrino Star Model of Dark Energy
title_sort fermi degenerate antineutrino star model of dark energy
publisher Hindawi Limited
series Advances in Astronomy
issn 1687-7969
1687-7977
publishDate 2020-01-01
description When the Large Hadron Collider resumes operations in 2021, several experiments will directly measure the motion of antihydrogen in free fall for the first time. Our current understanding of the universe is not yet fully prepared for the possibility that antimatter has negative gravitational mass. This paper proposes a model of cosmology, where the state of high energy density of the big bang is created by the collapse of an antineutrino star that has exceeded its Chandrasekhar limit. To allow the first neutrino stars and antineutrino stars to form naturally from an initial quantum vacuum state, it helps to assume that antimatter has negative gravitational mass. This assumption may also be helpful to identify dark energy. The degenerate remnant of an antineutrino star can today have an average mass density that is similar to the dark energy density of the ΛCDM model. When in hydrostatic equilibrium, this antineutrino star remnant can emit isothermal cosmic microwave background radiation and accelerate matter radially. This model and the ΛCDM model are in similar quantitative agreement with supernova distance measurements. Therefore, this model is useful as a purely academic exercise and as preparation for possible future discoveries.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2020/8654307
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