Gurzadyan theorem
In cosmology, the Gurzadyan theorem, proved by Vahe Gurzadyan, states the most general functional form for the force satisfying the condition of identity of the gravity of the sphere and of a point mass located in the sphere's center. This theorem thus refers to the first statement of Isaac Newton’s shell theorem (the identity mentioned above) but not the second one, namely, the absence of gravitational force inside a shell.
The theorem had entered and its importance for cosmology outlined in several papers as well as in shell theorem.
Formula and the cosmological constant
The formula for the force derived in has the form
where and are constants. The first term is the familiar law of universal gravitation, the second one corresponds to the cosmological constant term in general relativity and McCrea-Milne cosmology. Then the field is force-free only in the center of a shell but the confinement (oscillator) term does not change the initial symmetry of the Newtonian field. Also, this field corresponds to the only field possessing the property of the Newtonian one: the closing of orbits at any negative value of energy, i.e. the coincidence of the period of variation of the value of the radius vector with that of its revolution by (resonance principle) .
Consequences: cosmological constant as a physical constant
Einstein named the cosmological constant as a universal constant, introducing it to define the static cosmological model. Einstein has stated: “I should have initially set in Newton's sense. But the new considerations speak for a non-zero , which strives to bring about a non-zero mean density of matter.” This theorem solves that contradiction between “non-zero ” and Newton's law.
From this theorem the cosmological constant emerges as additional constant of gravity along with the Newton's gravitational constant . Then, the cosmological constant is dimension independent and matter-uncoupled and hence can be considered even more universal than Newton's gravitational constant.
For joining the set of fundamental constants , the gravitational Newton's constant, the speed of light and the Planck constant, yields
and a dimensionless quantity emerges for the 4-constant set
where is a real number. Note, no dimensionless quantity is possible to construct from the 3 constants .
This within a numerical factor, , coincides with the information (or entropy) of de Sitter event horizon
and the Bekenstein Bound
Rescaling of physical constants
Within the conformal cyclic cosmology this theorem implies that, in each aeon of an initial value of , the values of the 3 physical constants will be eligible for rescaling fulfilling the dimensionless ratio of invariants with respect to the conformal transformation
Then the ratio yields
for all physical quantities in Planck (initial) and de Sitter (final) eras of the aeons, remaining invariant under conformal transformations.
Inhomogeneous Fredholm equation
This theorem, in the context of nonlocal effects in a system of gravitating particles, leads to the inhomogeneous Dirichlet boundary problem for the Poisson equation
where is the radius of the region,
- .
Its solution can be expressed in terms of the double layer potential, which leads to an inhomogeneous nonlinear Hammerstein integral equation for the gravitational potential
This leads to a linear inhomogeneous 2nd kind Fredholm equation
Its solution can be expressed in terms of the resolvent of the integral kernel and the non-linear (repulsive) term
Observational indications
The dynamics of groups and clusters of galaxies are claimed to fit the theorem, see also. The possibility of two Hubble flows, a local one, determined by that formula, and a global one, described by Friedmannian cosmological equations was stated in.