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arxiv: 1405.4369 · v2 · pith:YUGY24GZnew · submitted 2014-05-17 · 🌌 astro-ph.SR · astro-ph.CO· astro-ph.EP· gr-qc· hep-ph

Can a variable gravitational constant resolve the Faint Young Sun Paradox ?

classification 🌌 astro-ph.SR astro-ph.COastro-ph.EPgr-qchep-ph
keywords earthodotyoungchangesconstantfaintfaintergravitational
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Solar models suggest that four billion years ago the young Sun was about 25% fainter than it is today, rendering Earth's oceans frozen and lifeless. However, there is ample geophysical evidence that Earth had a liquid ocean teeming with life 4 Gyr ago. Since ${\cal L_\odot} \propto G^7M_\odot^5$, the Sun's luminosity ${\cal L_\odot}$ is exceedingly sensitive to small changes in the gravitational constant $G$. We show that a percent-level increase in $G$ in the past would have prevented Earth's oceans from freezing, resolving the faint young Sun paradox. Such small changes in $G$ are consistent with observational bounds on ${\Delta G}/G$. Since ${\cal L}_{\rm SNIa} \propto G^{-3/2}$, an increase in $G$ leads to fainter supernovae, creating tension between standard candle and standard ruler probes of dark energy. Precisely such a tension has recently been reported by the Planck team.

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