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Virtual gravitational dipoles: The key for the understanding of the Universe?

Before the end of this decade, three competing experiments (ALPHA, AEGIS and GBAR) will discover if atoms of antihydrogen fall up or down. We wonder what the major changes in astrophysics and cosmology would be if it is experimentally confirmed that antimatter falls upwards. The key point is: If ant...

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Autor principal: Hajdukovic, Dragan Slavkov
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.dark.2014.03.002
http://cds.cern.ch/record/1703653
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author Hajdukovic, Dragan Slavkov
author_facet Hajdukovic, Dragan Slavkov
author_sort Hajdukovic, Dragan Slavkov
collection CERN
description Before the end of this decade, three competing experiments (ALPHA, AEGIS and GBAR) will discover if atoms of antihydrogen fall up or down. We wonder what the major changes in astrophysics and cosmology would be if it is experimentally confirmed that antimatter falls upwards. The key point is: If antiparticles have negative gravitational charge, the quantum vacuum, well established in the Standard Model of Particles and Fields, contains virtual gravitational dipoles. The main conclusions are: (1) the physical vacuum enriched with gravitational dipoles is compatible with a cyclic universe alternatively dominated by matter and antimatter, without initial singularity and without need for cosmic inflation; (2) the virtual dipoles might explain the phenomena usually attributed to dark matter and dark energy. While what we have presented is still far from a complete theory, hopefully it can stimulate a radically different and potentially important way of thinking.
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spelling cern-17036532022-08-10T21:11:14Zdoi:10.1016/j.dark.2014.03.002http://cds.cern.ch/record/1703653engHajdukovic, Dragan SlavkovVirtual gravitational dipoles: The key for the understanding of the Universe?Other Fields of PhysicsBefore the end of this decade, three competing experiments (ALPHA, AEGIS and GBAR) will discover if atoms of antihydrogen fall up or down. We wonder what the major changes in astrophysics and cosmology would be if it is experimentally confirmed that antimatter falls upwards. The key point is: If antiparticles have negative gravitational charge, the quantum vacuum, well established in the Standard Model of Particles and Fields, contains virtual gravitational dipoles. The main conclusions are: (1) the physical vacuum enriched with gravitational dipoles is compatible with a cyclic universe alternatively dominated by matter and antimatter, without initial singularity and without need for cosmic inflation; (2) the virtual dipoles might explain the phenomena usually attributed to dark matter and dark energy. While what we have presented is still far from a complete theory, hopefully it can stimulate a radically different and potentially important way of thinking.Before the end of this decade, three competing experiments (ALPHA, AEGIS and GBAR) will discover if atoms of antihydrogen fall up or down. We wonder what the major changes in astrophysics and cosmology would be if it is experimentally confirmed that antimatter falls upwards. The key point is: If antiparticles have negative gravitational charge, the quantum vacuum, well established in the Standard Model of Particles and Fields, contains virtual gravitational dipoles. The main conclusions are: (1) the physical vacuum enriched with gravitational dipoles is compatible with a cyclic universe alternatively dominated by matter and antimatter, without initial singularity and without need for cosmic inflation; (2) the virtual dipoles might explain the phenomena usually attributed to dark matter and dark energy. While what we have presented is still far from a complete theory, hopefully it can stimulate a radically different and potentially important way of thinking.arXiv:1405.5792oai:cds.cern.ch:17036532014-04-10
spellingShingle Other Fields of Physics
Hajdukovic, Dragan Slavkov
Virtual gravitational dipoles: The key for the understanding of the Universe?
title Virtual gravitational dipoles: The key for the understanding of the Universe?
title_full Virtual gravitational dipoles: The key for the understanding of the Universe?
title_fullStr Virtual gravitational dipoles: The key for the understanding of the Universe?
title_full_unstemmed Virtual gravitational dipoles: The key for the understanding of the Universe?
title_short Virtual gravitational dipoles: The key for the understanding of the Universe?
title_sort virtual gravitational dipoles: the key for the understanding of the universe?
topic Other Fields of Physics
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.dark.2014.03.002
http://cds.cern.ch/record/1703653
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