Skip to main content
edited tags
Link
Qmechanic
  • 213.1k
  • 48
  • 590
  • 2.3k
edited body; edited tags; edited title
Source Link
Qmechanic
  • 213.1k
  • 48
  • 590
  • 2.3k

cosmological Cosmological constant from the view of renormalization

A quick question:

Is the appearance of the cosmological constant the puzzling part, or the smallness of it compared to other typical scales (Higgs vevVEV for example).

Because given (semi-classical) gravity, it is necessary to introduce a constant term in the lagrangian, that may have a finite value.

Also, is there anyone who has calculated the flow of this constant given some particle content in the universe (say only the fermion sector with diracDirac mass, or even the full SM) to maybe explain the smallness in a natural way?

cosmological constant from the view of renormalization

A quick question:

Is the appearance of the cosmological constant the puzzling part, or the smallness of it compared to other typical scales (Higgs vev for example).

Because given (semi-classical) gravity, it is necessary to introduce a constant term in the lagrangian, that may have a finite value.

Also, is there anyone who has calculated the flow of this constant given some particle content in the universe (say only the fermion sector with dirac mass, or even the full SM) to maybe explain the smallness in a natural way?

Cosmological constant from the view of renormalization

A quick question:

Is the appearance of the cosmological constant the puzzling part, or the smallness of it compared to other typical scales (Higgs VEV for example).

Because given (semi-classical) gravity, it is necessary to introduce a constant term in the lagrangian, that may have a finite value.

Also, is there anyone who has calculated the flow of this constant given some particle content in the universe (say only the fermion sector with Dirac mass, or even the full SM) to maybe explain the smallness in a natural way?

Source Link

cosmological constant from the view of renormalization

A quick question:

Is the appearance of the cosmological constant the puzzling part, or the smallness of it compared to other typical scales (Higgs vev for example).

Because given (semi-classical) gravity, it is necessary to introduce a constant term in the lagrangian, that may have a finite value.

Also, is there anyone who has calculated the flow of this constant given some particle content in the universe (say only the fermion sector with dirac mass, or even the full SM) to maybe explain the smallness in a natural way?