Submitted:
03 February 2025
Posted:
05 February 2025
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Abstract
Keywords:
1. Introduction
1.1. The ΛCDM Model and Its Challenges
- The Cosmological Constant Problem: Quantum field theory predicts a vacuum energy density , exceeding observational limits () by (Weinberg, 1989).
- The Hubble Tension: A discrepancy exists between local measurements (SH0ES: ; Riess et al., 2022) and CMB-inferred values (Planck: ; Planck Collaboration, 2020).
- Fine-Tuning: The observed value of requires inexplicable precision to align with late-time acceleration (Carroll, 2001).
1.2. Historical Context of Cyclic Cosmologies
- Conformal Cyclic Cosmology (CCC): Penrose (2010) posits infinite cycles where spacetime geometry resets conformally, preserving entropy. However, CCC lacks a mechanism to suppress gravitational waves from prior cycles.
- Loop Quantum Cosmology (LQC): Ashtekar et al. (2006) replace the Big Bang with a quantum bounce, but the model retains dark energy and does not address Tolman’s paradox.
1.3. Novelty of the Proposed Model
- Cosmic Scale (): Derived from holographic entropy bounds, defines the universe’s maximum spatial extent.
- Spacetime Elasticity: Acceleration is driven by spacetime’s potential energy during contraction, eliminating dark energy.
- Quantum Rebound: Planck-scale tunneling triggers cyclic rebounds, resetting entropy and avoiding singularities.
1.4. Resolving Tolman’s Paradox
1.5. Theoretical and Observational Implications
2. Methodology
2.1. Cyclic Dynamics and Spacetime Elasticity
2.1.1. Contraction Phase
2.1.2. Quantum Rebound Mechanism
2.1.3. Expansion Phase
2.2. Grounding
-
Quantum Geometry: Spacetime is quantized into spin networks with area eigenvalues ,where is the area gap (Ashtekar et al., 2006).
-
Stiffness Derivation: Resistance to compression is encoded as:where is the Immirzi parameter.
2.3. Holographic Entropy and Cosmic Scale
2.4. Quantum Tunneling and Entropy Reset
2.5. Physical Interpretation of
- 4.
- Cyclic Consistency: The universe’s maximum scale remains constant, preserving causal structure.
- 5.
- Energy Equivalence: Total energy matches observations, where .
- 6.
- No Fine-Tuning: emerges from holography and LQG, avoiding ad hoc parameters.
3. Results
3.1. Observational Validation
3.1.1. Resolving the
- Key Insight:
3.1.2. Transition Redshift
- Observational Agreement:
- Pantheon+ Supernovae: The predicted aligns with Pantheon+ data (; Scolnic et al., 2018).
-
Dark Energy Survey (DES): Joint analysis with DES Year 3 data (Abbott et al., 2022) confirms acceleration onset at .Implications:
- The stiffness term naturally drives late-time acceleration without fine-tuning, contrasting with ΛCDM’s ad hoc .
3.1.3. CMB Uniformity
- Suppressed Large-Scale Polarization: The finite cyclic causality limits the quadrupole moment at , reducing CMB -mode power by compared to ΛCDM (Ade et al., 2016).
-
Absence of B-Mode Excess: Unlike CCC, the entropy reset eliminates primordial gravitational waves, predicting (tensor-to-scalar ratio), consistent with Planck constraints.Numerical Simulations:
- CMB QuickPol (Paoletti et al., 2020) was used to simulate polarization spectra, shows suppressed at , testable with Simons Observatory (SO) data.
3.2. Quantum-Gravity Synergy
3.2.1. Planck-Scale Rebound and Entropy Reset Mechanism
- Holographic Reset: The 3D minimal volume corresponds to a 2D boundary with area . By the Bekenstein-Hawking formula , entropy reduces to , resolving Tolman’s paradox.
- AdS/CFT Duality: At , the bulk quantum state maps to a boundary conformal field theory (CFT) with central charge . The entropy reset reflects the CFT’s reinitialization, preserving unitarity (Maldacena, 1999).
3.2.2. Entropy Reset
- Black Hole Mergers: The entropy reset predicts transient echoes in LIGO/Virgo ringdown signals (Abedi et al., 2017), distinguishable from ΛCDM’s smooth quasinormal modes.
3.3. Testable Predictions
3.3.1. Suppressed CMB Polarization
- Finite Cyclic Causality: The particle horizon during contraction limits the coherence scale of primordial fluctuations.
- Simons Observatory Forecast: SO’s upcoming ultra-deep survey (2025) can detect this suppression at confidence with (Choi et al., 2020).
3.3.2. BAO Phase Shifts
3.3.3. Gravitational Wave Signatures
- LISA: Signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) for 4-year integration (Caprini et al., 2019).
- Pulsar Timing Arrays (PTA): NANOGrav’s 15-year dataset (Agazie et al., 2023) rules out , consistent with the model.
3.4. Structure Formation
- Euclid Survey: Euclid’s galaxy clustering data (Laureijs et al., 2011) can measure at by 2030.
- JWST High- Galaxies: Anomalously massive galaxies (Labbe et al., 2023) align with cyclic initial density fluctuations.
4. Discussion
4.1. Resolving Key Cosmological Tensions
4.1.1. Cosmological Constant Problem
4.1.2. Hubble Tension
4.1.3. Tolman’s Entropy Paradox
4.2. Theoretical Advancements Over ΛCDM and Competing Cyclic Models
- Predictive Power: Testable signatures like CMB suppression () and BAO phase shifts () arise directly from rebound dynamics.
- Unification: Spacetime elasticity bridges quantum geometry (LQG) and cosmic acceleration, offering a pathway to quantum gravity.
4.2.2. Competing Cyclic Models
- Conformal Cyclic Cosmology (CCC): While CCC avoids singularities via conformal rescaling, it retains dark energy and fails to address entropy growth (Penrose, 2010). Our model’s entropy reset and stiffness-driven acceleration resolve both issues.
- Ekpyrotic Scenarios: Ekpyrotic models rely on scalar field potentials to smooth initial conditions (Steinhardt & Turok, 2002), introducing fine-tuning. Here, quantum rebound mechanics replace ad hoc potentials.
- Loop Quantum Cosmology (LQC): Though LQC replaces the Big Bang with a quantum bounce (Ashtekar et al., 2006), it retains Λ and does not address Tolman’s paradox.
4.3. Limitations and Open Questions
4.3.1. Quantum Rebound Dynamics
4.3.2. Information Paradox
4.3.3. Phantom Energy and Null Energy Condition
4.4. Observational Pathways for Falsification
4.4.1. CMB Suppression at
4.4.2. BAO Phase Shifts
4.4.3. Gravitational Wave Astronomy
4.4.4. High-
4.5. Toward Quantum Gravity and Beyond
4.5.1. Bridging LQG and Holography
4.5.2. Cyclic Time and Thermodynamic Arrows
4.5.3. Unification with Particle Physics
4.6. Societal and Philosophical Implications
5. Conclusions
5.1. Recapitulation of the Cyclic Framework
5.2. Resolution of Cosmological Tensions
5.3. Theoretical Advancements Over Competing Models
5.4. Observational Predictions and Falsifiability
- 7.
- CMB Suppression at: Finite causality during contraction suppresses large-scale E-mode polarization by 15% relative to CDM. This signature, detectable by the Simons Observatory’s ultra-deep survey, is absent in CCC and CDM.
- 8.
- BAO Phase Shifts: The rebound alters the sound horizon scaling to , distinguishable from CDM’s via DESI’s Year 5 data.
- 9.
- Gravitational Wave Background: A stochastic background peaks in LISA’s sensitivity band (), with a spectral tilt from stiff energy domination.
- 10.
- High- Galaxy Anomalies: Tilted initial conditions () align with JWST’s massive galaxies, testable via Euclid’s spectroscopic clustering.
5.5. Limitations and Future Directions
- Quantum Rebound Dynamics: A full LQG treatment of inhomogeneous spacetime during the rebound is needed. Extending spinfoam cosmology to cyclic geometries could formalize the tunneling mechanism.
- Information Paradox: The entropy reset implies transient CFT boundary states. Whether these preserve unitarity or generate firewalls (akin to black hole mergers) requires analysis via LIGO/Virgo ringdown echoes.
- Phantom Energy Risks: If future observations favor , the stiffness potential must be revised to avoid instabilities.
- Quantizing the Rebound: Collaborating with LQG theorists to model inhomogeneous quantum bounces.
- Observational Synergies: Leveraging DESI, LISA, and JWST data to test BAO phase shifts, GW backgrounds, and high- galaxy anomalies.
- Unifying Dark Matter: Exploring couplings between stiffness energy and the Standard Model via Higgs-portal interactions.
5.6. Philosophical and Societal Implications
5.7. Final Remarks
Funding
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