˜Theœ weight of the vacuum : a history of Dark Energy

Author(s)

    • Kragh, Helge S.
    • Overduin, James

Bibliographic Information

˜Theœ weight of the vacuum : a history of Dark Energy

Helge S. Kragh ; James M. Overduin

(SpringerBriefs in Physics)

Springer, c2014

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Description and Table of Contents

Description

The 2011 Nobel Prize in Physics was awarded for the discovery of cosmic acceleration due to dark energy, a discovery that is all the more perplexing as nobody knows what dark energy actually is. We put the modern concept of cosmological vacuum energy into historical context and show how it grew out of disparate roots in quantum mechanics (zero-point energy) and relativity theory (the cosmological constant, Einstein's "greatest blunder"). These two influences have remained strangely aloof and still co-exist in an uneasy alliance that is at the heart of the greatest crisis in theoretical physics, the cosmological-constant problem.

Table of Contents

Early ideas of space and vacuum.- The active ether.- Planck's second quantum theory.- Half-quanta and zero-point energy.- Nernst's cosmic quantum ether.- The Hamburg connection.- The cosmological constant.- From Casimir to Zel'dovich.- Inflation and the false vacuum.- Variable cosmological constants and quintessence.- How heavy is the vacuum?.- The accelerating universe.

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Details

  • NCID
    BB17232147
  • ISBN
    • 9783642550898
  • Country Code
    gw
  • Title Language Code
    eng
  • Text Language Code
    eng
  • Place of Publication
    Heidelberg
  • Pages/Volumes
    viii, 113 p.
  • Size
    24 cm
  • Classification
  • Parent Bibliography ID
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