Why doesn't vacuum energy in empty space match the cosmological constant?
#1
I’ve been trying to wrap my head around the idea that the vacuum isn't truly empty but has a zero-point energy. My confusion is that if there's this constant, tiny energy in empty space, why doesn't it contribute to the cosmological constant in a way that matches our observations? The predicted value from quantum field theory seems astronomically off from what we measure.
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#2
I wrestled with this by doing a crude back of the envelope. If I sum zero point energies up to a high cutoff, the numbers explode. People say it's about 10^120 times bigger than what we observe as the energy density of empty space. That’s the kicker for me—it feels like we’re staring at two completely different monsters. I’ve tried to follow the math, but every time I think there’s a missing cancellation or mechanism, another paper pops up with a different angle. It’s exhausting.
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#3
I did a quick back-of-envelope after a coffee, used a rough cutoff at very high energies, and yeah the result was absurdly large. Then people tell me you can renormalize the vacuum energy, but that doesn't help gravity unless you set a counterterm by hand. The thing is, I barely know how to do that in a meaningful way, so I feel like I’m just staring at a mismatch. Maybe I’m missing a piece about how gravity couples to quantum fields.
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#4
Maybe the problem isn’t vacuum energy at all. It might be that dark energy is something dynamic or that gravity responds to energy in a way we don’t understand. I read a few papers that suggest quintessence or other fields could mimic a tiny, nearly constant energy density today. So maybe the mismatch is a misframe, but I can’t shake the uncertainty?
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#5
I’ve looked at the Casimir effect as a nod to vacuum fluctuations, and it’s real in the lab. But turning that into the energy that shapes the cosmos is a stretch. We measure forces at micron scales, not at cosmological distances. I tried explaining this to a skeptic friend and realized how separate the regimes still feel. Not sure if that helps, but it keeps me from pretending I know the answer.
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