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Applying the seminal work of Bose in 1924 on what was later known as Bose-Einstein statistics, Einstein predicted in 1925 that at sufficiently low temperatures, a macroscopic fraction of constituents of a gas of bosons will drop down to the lowest available energy state, forming a `giant molecule or a Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC), described by a `macroscopic wavefunction. In this article we show that when the BEC of ultralight bosons extends over cosmological length scales, it can potentially explain the origins of both dark matter and dark energy. We speculate on the nature of these bosons.
We show that Dark Matter consisting of bosons of mass of about 1eV or less has critical temperature exceeding the temperature of the universe at all times, and hence would have formed a Bose-Einstein condensate at very early epochs. We also show that
We review analytical solutions of the Einstein equations which are expressed in terms of elementary functions and describe Friedmann-Lema^itre-Robertson-Walker universes sourced by multiple (real or effective) perfect fluids with constant equations o
In a very recent paper [1], we have proposed a novel $4$-dimensional gravitational theory with two dynamical degrees of freedom, which serves as a consistent realization of $Dto4$ Einstein-Gauss-Bonnet gravity with the rescaled Gauss-Bonnet coupling
Lectures by the author at the 1986 Cargese summer school modestly corrected and uploaded for greater accessibility. Some of the authors views on the quantum mechanics of cosmology have changed from those presented here but may still be of historical
The universal character of the gravitational interaction provided by the equivalence principle motivates a geometrical description of gravity. The standard formulation of General Relativity `a la Einstein attributes gravity to the spacetime curvature