Dec 11 – 15, 2023
Tsung-Dao Lee Institute
Asia/Shanghai timezone

A minimal SM/LCDM cosmology

Dec 14, 2023, 11:40 AM
50m
Ballroom

Ballroom

Plenary Talk Plenary Talk

Speaker

Neil Turok (University of Edinburgh, UK)

Description

Title: A minimal SM/LCDM cosmology
Neil Turok, University of Edinburgh and Perimeter Institute
Abstract:
Recent observations point to a surprisingly economical description of the universe on both very small and very large scales. Stimulated by these findings, Boyle and I have proposed a new, potentially more complete theoretical framework than currently popular paradigms. Our search has so far led to 1) the simplest-yet explanation for the cosmic dark matter, soon to be tested by galaxy surveys, 2) a thermodynamic explanation for the large scale geometry of the cosmos, based on the concept of gravitational entropy à la Hawking, 3) a new account of the big bang singularity as a “mirror” enforcing CPT-symmetric boundary conditions, realising Penrose's ``Weyl curvature hypothesis" and 4) a new mechanism for cancelling the divergent vacuum energy and the trace anomalies in the Standard Model (SM). The new mechanism successfully predicts the primordial density perturbations in terms of the SM’s gauge couplings. It also explains why there are 3 generations of elementary particles, each including a RH neutrino, one of which is stable and comprises the dark matter. I’ll outline the challenges the new picture faces and the opportunities it presents including prospective observational tests.

Primary author

Neil Turok (University of Edinburgh, UK)

Presentation materials