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We present here how the gravothermal or Antonovs instability, which was originally formulated in the microcanonical ensemble, is modified in the presence of a cosmological constant and in the canonical ensemble. In contrast to the microcanonical ensemble, there is a minimum, and not maximum, radius for which metastable states exist. In addition this critical radius is decreasing, and not increasing, with increasing cosmological constant. The minimum temperature for which metastable states exist is decreasing with increasing cosmological constant, while above some positive value of the cosmological constant, there appears a second critical temperature. For lower temperatures than the second critical temperature value, metastable states reappear, indicating a typical reentrant phase transition. The two critical temperatures merge when the cosmological density equals one half the mean density of the system.
Bouncing models have been proposed by many authors as a completion, or even as an alternative to inflation for the description of the very early and dense Universe. However, most bouncing models contain a contracting phase from a very large and raref
We examine the plausibility of crossing the cosmological constant ($L$) barrier in a two-field quintessence model of dark energy, involving a kinetic interaction between the individual fields. Such a kinetic interaction may have its origin in the fou
It is well known that string theories naturally compactify on anti-de Sitter spaces, and yet cosmological observations show no evidence of a negative cosmological constant in the early Universes evolution. In this letter we present two simple nonloca
We analyze Brans-Dicke gravity with a cosmological constant, $Lambda$, and cold dark matter (BD-$Lambda$CDM for short) in the light of the latest cosmological observations on distant supernovae, Hubble rate measurements at different redshifts, baryon
We present cosmological constraints on the scalar-tensor theory of gravity by analyzing the angular power spectrum data of the cosmic microwave background obtained from the Planck 2015 results together with the baryon acoustic oscillations (BAO) data