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Are virtual particles dark energy? (split from vacuum discussion)


Enthalpy

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in even total empty space there are things called "virtual particles" that pop in and out of existence that are little understood so far...I see these particles as analogous to the air of earth as an "air of space", but have very different properties...it's a very exciting prospect to find out what they are and if they affect things other than the cosmic expansion, of which they may be causing...they are also sometimes referred to as dark energy...

 

What kind of relationship do you imagine between virtual particles, which are well understood, and dark energy?

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enthalpy, I think they are one and the same. The leftover energy of the fleeting particles annialation is dark energy...


virtual particles are well understood? How are they well understood and their source is unknown ? We do know some things due to casimir experiments, if that is what you are referencing...

Edited by hoola
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the reason I think dark energy is sourced from virtual particle pairs, is that they are "there" (everywhere) as prospective candidates, and look attractive as candidates as any mechanical process has an inherent inefficiency...that inefficiency in the annilalation phase is the small remnant leftover energy..

Edited by hoola
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the reason I think dark energy is sourced from virtual particle pairs, is that they are "there" (everywhere) as prospective candidates, and look attractive as candidates as any mechanical process has an inherent inefficiency...that inefficiency in the annilalation phase is the small remnant leftover energy..

 

Mechanical inefficiency, as in waste heat from entropy gains? Particle annihilation doesn't suffer from this.

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imatfaal....right, which is (one reason) why I stated that we know little of them...if they are considered as mathematical structures giving appearance into the "physical" universe, instead considered as traditional physical objects, a more accurate assessment of their nature might be given...that, I think is the "symmetry breaking" between mathematically described things and the things that end up getting "built" using those descriptions....namely, our universe...

Edited by hoola
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virtual particle pairs may not suffer heat loss due to annihilation since they are not "real" in the sense of visible matter. The fact that virtual particles exist for such brief periods could determine a change from heat output upon annilihation to a related quantity of repulsive tensor force...

Edited by hoola
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Virtual particles are the result of the quantum fields which permeate all of space. A simple calculation placing harmonic oscillators at every point in space for energy calculation along with suitable boundary conditions for the cut-off point gives the silly value that Imatfaal alluded to.

 

This vacuum energy ( and false zero states ) have been used to account for inflation and the cosmological constant ( Einstein's biggest blunder ? ). The cosmological constant is one of the leading candidates for universal expansion and acceleration, i.e. dark energy.

 

Just because our calculations are too simplistic and not mature enough to give reasonable results for vacuum energy is no reason to discount the idea that dark energy is related to vacuum energy which may be related to virtual particles.

Edited by MigL
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Just because our calculations are too simplistic and not mature enough to give reasonable results for vacuum energy is no reason to discount the idea that dark energy is related to vacuum energy which may be related to virtual particles.

 

By the same token, asserting that we know that dark energy is the vacuum energy is overstating what we know.

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