Viability of bouncing cosmology in energy-momentum-squared gravity
Abstract
We analyze the early-time isotropic cosmology in the so-called energy-momentum-squared gravity (EMSG). In this theory, a TμTμ term is added to the Einstein-Hilbert action, which has been shown to replace the initial singularity by a regular bounce. We show that this is not the case, and the bouncing solution obtained does not describe our Universe since it belongs to a different solution branch. The solution branch that corresponds to our Universe, while nonsingular, is geodesically incomplete. We analyze the conditions for having viable regular-bouncing solutions in a general class of theories that modify gravity by adding higher order matter terms. Applying these conditions on generalizations of EMSG that add a (TμTμ)n term to the action, we show that the case of n=5/8 is the only one that can give a viable bouncing solution, while the n>5/8 cases suffer from the same problem as EMSG, i.e. they give nonsingular, geodesically incomplete solutions. Furthermore, we show that the 1/2<n<5/8 cases can provide a nonsingular initially de Sitter solution. Finally, the expanding, geodesically incomplete branch of EMSG or its generalizations can be combined with its contracting counterpart using junction conditions to provide a (weakly) singular bouncing solution. We outline the junction conditions needed for this extension and provide the extended solution explicitly for EMSG. In this sense, EMSG replaces the standard early-time singularity by a singular bounce instead of a regular one.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.