The article addresses the problem of the cosmological constant, a vast gap between the theoretically predicted vacuum energy density and the one actually observed. Dr. Nader Butto proposes a new concept, the “Omnium Vacuum,” a primordial state that existed before the Big Bang, devoid of time and space, with a constant energy density derived from fundamental constants.
He distinguishes between three states of the vacuum: the Omnium Vacuum, the singularity at the beginning of the Big Bang, and dark energy, which represents the current form of the vacuum in the expanding universe. The differences in densities and the “condensation” of part of the Omnium Vacuum into matter and dark energy during cosmic expansion provide an explanation for the observed gap. The theory presents the vacuum as a kind of superfluid, whose hydrodynamic flow explains the accelerated cosmic expansion.