1. Introduction
General relativity is an example of a theory of impressive power and simplicity, but its ambit is purely classical. The CC, on the other hand, is a typical example of a modification originally introduced [
1] by hand to help the fit of the physical data [
2].
Even if unpleasant, it is the sign that a more general theory (i.e. quantum gravity (QG)) is necessary for a complete understanding.
In fact, the quantum version of general relativity is in progress [
3,
4,
5,
6,
7,
8,
9], and its contribution leads to the emergence of the CC as a correction to the general relativity [
10].
Its original role of allowing static homogeneous solutions in general relativity equations in the presence of matter [
11] (and then discharged by Einstein himself) turned out to be unnecessary when the expansion of the universe was discovered [
12]. Nevertheless, there have been a number of subsequent episodes in which a non-zero CC was considered as an explanation of astronomical observations [
13,
14,
15,
16].
Meanwhile, particle physicists have realized that the CC can be interpreted as a measure of the energy density of the vacuum [
10,
11,
12,
13,
14,
15,
16,
17,
18]. This energy density is the sum of a number of contributions, each of magnitude much larger than the upper limits of the CC known today. The question of why the observed cosmological vacuum energy is so small compared to that deriving by the scales of particle physics has become a celebrated puzzle.
By using the hydrodynamic model of quantum gravity [
19], the present work shows that the CC naturally appears in the theory. The outcome shows that the energy-impulse tensor density (QEITD) introduces a quantum contribution that leads to a non-zero CC-value only in the place where the mass of a particle is present, and globally to an observationally accessible CC.
The paper is organized as follows: In the first section, the hydrodynamic model of quantum gravity is synthetically resumed, and the emergence of the CC in the gravitational equations is shown. In the second part of the work, the theoretical structure of the CC is analyzed and discussed respect to its large-scale value and time-dependence.
2. The Hydrodynamic Approach to Quantum Gravity
The author has shown [
19] that the hydrodynamic model of quantum gravity leads to the equation
where
is the covariant quantum energy-impulse tensor (QEITD) and where
is coupled to the quantum equations (defined in
Section 2.2).
2.1. The QEITD Derived by the Hydrodynamic Quantum Model
In order to obtain the covariant QEITD, it is enough to calculate its contravariant form in the flat Minkowski space-time.
In this case, the quantum hydrodynamic equations of motion (for scalar uncharged particles), as shown by Guvenis [
20], read
and
where
is the 4-current, where
and where the connection between the standard quantum notations and the hydrodynamic ones is given by the relation
Equations (3) and (4), describing the (quantum) motion of the mass density
(generalized to the non-Euclidean space in
Section 2.2), are coupled with Equation (1) through the QEITD [
19]
where
is the Lagrangian density, and
is the hydrodynamic Lagrangian function that defines the quantum hydrodynamic equations of motion as a function of the couple of real variables
and
[
20,
21,
22,
23] where the momentum reads
The quantum hydrodynamic equation of motion (3) that, in the Lagrangian form, reads [
19]
and
where
is coupled to the current conservation Equation (4) where the 4-current
Equation (6), after simple manipulation, reads [
19]
where
Moreover, by using Equations (14) and (15) it follows that
and, hence, that
and
where
and where
has been used in [
19], where the quantum potential reads
. As shown by Bialiniki-Birula
et al. and by the author himself [
19,
20,
21,
22,
23], it is noteworthy to observe that, due to the biunique relation between the quantum hydrodynamic approach (with the quantization bond) and the standard quantum equations [
21,
22,
23,
24], Equations (3) and (4) are equivalent to the Klein-Gordon equation (KGE) [
19,
20,
21,
22,
23]
and, hence, the QEITD (18) makes the quantum gravity Equation (1) independent by the hydrodynamic approach used to derive it.
2.2. The Quantum Gravity System of Equations
Now we have all the equations of the system that define the quantum gravitational evolution.
The Einstein Equation (1) is coupled to the KGE that (for scalar uncharged particles) in a non-Euclidean space-time reads
with the covariant form of the QEITD (8)
that includes the quantum contribution, given by the quantum potential, that reads
3. The Cosmological Constant
In this section, we derive the cosmological constant by requiring that the classical Einstein equation and the minimum action principle (MAP) are recovered in the classical limit.
By considering, for the sake of simplicity, states of matter (or antimatter), without mixed superposition of them, we obtain the identity [
19]
where, according to the Dirac interpretation, the negative energy states apply to the antimatter. By using Equation (23), the QEITD (18) reads
where
and
are the matter and antimatter particle density, respectively, so that we can explicitly write the hydrodynamic motion equation [
19], which reads
where the quantum energy-impulse tensor
[
19] reads
Moreover, since, from the mechanical point of view,
it follows that all QEITD tensors of the form
are able to lead to the same motion equation (in Euclidean space). Nevertheless, from the point of view of general relativity, since, in non-Euclidean space, the motion Equation (25)
depends by the metric tensor
, which, by Equation (1), is a function of
, only one form (that minimizes the action) of
is possiblein Equation (28) .
In order to determine , we require that the Einstein equation (which minimizes the action) is recovered by Equation (1) in the classical limit (i.e. ).
By imposing this condition on Equation (1), the explicit Expression (2) is obtained for the CC, which leads to the quantum gravitational equation
Moreover, if we write the QEITD
as
where
is the classical part of the QEITD (
i.e. for dust matter [
21]), Equation (30) reads
where
, the overall CC, reads
In the classical limit (when , ), is equal to zero, and the general relativity equation is recovered without the cosmological term.
As far as the vacuum is concerned, which is characterizd by the values
,
, it follows that
4. The Cosmological Constant in Presence of Matter
If, in the vacuum, the overall CC is null, in the regions of space where the matter is present and localized in particles (i.e. ), the exact cancellation of the CC does not happen. Since the quantum potential is larger wherethe mass concentration is higher, the CC becomes relevant in places where the matter is localized in quasi-punctual particles.
The maximal contribution from the cosmological term comes from those regions of space where the quantum potential is of order of the mass energy (as happens for the Plank mass black holes [
19]). In this case, we can set
with
so that the overall CC reads
which, since the contribution from low velocity matter is dominant (e.g., for neutrinos whose speed is close to that of light, it follows that
and
), leads to
Since the system of Equations (1)–(4) and (18) only considers the gravitational interaction, the only possible localized mass distribution is the black hole (BH) whose smallest mass has the value of the Planck mass [
19].
In this case, for a “particle” of a Planck mass localized in the sphere of its gravitational radius
[
19], we have
and
[
19] (so that
), that , introduced in Equation (37), gives the local value of
On the other hand, the mass density is practically null outside the BH radius so that
as well as
so that
Thence, if we consider the mean value of
(which gives rise to the cosmological effect)
where
represents the mean mass density of the nowadays universe [
24], whose estimated value is
it follows that the ratio
for a BH of Planck mass (given that the universe mean number of black holes with the Planck mass, per cubic meter, is
) reads
which shows an enormous difference between the local values of the CC respect to its mean on cosmological scale.
Given that the mass density of universe is BH of Planck mass per cubic meter, which own a density of in a volume , we obtain .
5. The Cosmological Constant of Particles with Mass Smaller than the Planck One
To evaluate the local value of the CC for a localized mass m (not due to gravitational force), we have to include into the gravitational problem the other interactions of the nature (in fact, Equation (3) is just for an uncharged scalar particle).
To introduce an external potential, in order to have the localization of a mass distribution, we have to consider at least the electromagnetic (em) force.
In this case (for Euclidean space, for instance), the KGE
or the Dirac equation
(where
for the em field) are coupled to the Maxwell one
for the photon [
25]. If we want to include the “strong” force of fermions (e.g., due to a scalar meson), we must add the field equation of the meson (like the Maxwell one for the photon),
(where, for instance,
, where
is the “self-interacting” field that, in renormalizable quartic interaction, reads
[
26]) and the fermion-meson interaction term
All these equations are coupled each other and, through the QEITD, with the gravitational one that defines the metric tensor and, thence, the covariant derivatives. However, the definition of the QEITD through the hydrodynamic representation of quantum mechanics is still not available for the strong and weak force. Thence, to evaluate the order of magnitude of the CC due to mass localization, in the
appendix, the CC is calculated for localized particles in quantum wells.
Moreover, if the localized mass is much smaller than that of the Planck mass, we can approximately substitute the covariant derivatives in Equations (45)–(49) with the normal derivatives.
By using this approximation, we do not need to solve the coupled gravitational system of motion equations, but the local overall CC can be evaluated by using the Euclidean limit of quantum equations. From Equation (44) and from the outputs given in the
appendix (A.11–A.12), we can see that the mean value
of the CC can differ by many orders of magnitude by the local one
. On the other hand, the huge local value of the CC in the place where the mass of a particle is concentrated (e.g., in a volume whose radius is of the order of the Compton length) can lead to a cosmological value that agrees in order of magnitude with that astronomically measured as a consequence of the dilution in a large vacuum space (see
Appendix).
6. Connection with the Quantum Field Theory
As for the quantum mechanics, the quantum field approach also has its own hydrodynamic representation that, as shown by Bhom and colleagues [
27], makes use of the “super-quantum potential.”
More recently, Koide and Kodama [
28] showed that the hydrodynamic quantum field model can also be obtained by means of the stochastic variational method.
If in the “mechanical” approach we have in the vacuum in the quantum field approach, assigned the probability distribution (PD) , even if the mean value in the vacuum is equal to zero, the variance is not null given that, generally speaking, the PD is not a delta-function. This leads to the description of the vacuum as a sea of virtual particles and antiparticles (with zero mean real particles) but with an intrinsic zero-point energy density.
Thence, since for the quantum vacuum
, if we make the identification
, it follows that
and, hence,
Nevertheless, by Equation (35) for the vacuum (
i.e. ), it follows that
so that, again, the overall CC
has a null contribution from the zero-point vacuum fluctuations.
In order to establish an analytical link between the absence of the quantum vacuum singularity of the hydrodynamic model and the quantum vacuum catastrophe within the standard QED and QCD, the present work envisages that the hydrodynamic model of the quantum field [
27] in non-Euclidean space-time has to be investigated.
7. Critical Overview
The derivation of the QG equations show that CC warrants that, in the classical limit, the Einstein equation (which satisfies the MAP) is recovered.
Nevertheless, the recovery of the classical gravity equation is not exact so as to fully derive the QG by the MAP.
The application of the MAP to the hydrodynamic equation poses some questions given that, among the hydrodynamic solutions of Equation (25), only those that own the “irrotational” property [
19,
21] (which warrants the quantization condition) describe the quantum mechanics. This fact generates an interplay between the MAP and the quantization postulate.
The full evaluation of such problem goes beyond the purpose of the present paper and has been left to be investigated in a future work.
Furthermore, it must be observed that, in the term
represents the mean mass density of the nowaday universe based on some implicit assumptions that deserve a comment.
represents the total matter density if we attribute the classical meaning to it. In fact, the term
has quantum properties with a contribution from the quantum superposition of states that can be disregarded just in the “macroscopic” classic universe, where the quantum decoherence takes place [
29,
30,
31].
For the initial instant of the universe, especially before of the inflation, when both the gravity and the quantum laws were all contemporaneously effective and strongly coupled, the value of had to be very different from the one it owns today since the mass of the particles was concentrated in a very small volume with an overall quantum coherence.
Finally, it is worth mentioning that, if the low curvature limit of Equation (1) in the classical case (
i.e. ) leads to the Newtonian gravity, the quantum corrections (for
) in the Galilean limit of Equation (1) [
32] can furnish a excellent experimental confirmation of the present model.
8. Conclusions
In the present work it has been shown that the CC originates by the quantum property of the vacuum where the particles are quasi-punctual and their mass is not smoothly distributed all around the space.
The equations show that the cosmological constant emerges in the hydrodynamic formulation of quantum gravity in order to obtain the Einstein equation in the classical limit that satisfies the MAP.
This work shows that the CC does not appear in the classical limit since it is deleted by an equal contribution, with opposite sign, coming from the quantum energy-impulse tensor.
This paper also shows that the contribution to the CC of the vacuum in the absence of matter is null as a consequence of the subtraction of an equal amount coming from the QEITD.
The outputs of the theory show that the overall CC can own a very large local value only in the place where the mass distribution of a quasi-punctual particle is present and that its effect can be as small as measured on cosmological scale. The theory shows that the CC owns a time dependence coming from the state of the universe. This fact makes possible a high CC value, at the initial instant of universe, compatibly with the very small one of the nowaday universe.