This preprint presents a comprehensive formulation of the multi‑sector cosmological framework, in which the Universe contains multiple non‑interacting sectors, each with its own microphysics, symmetry‑breaking history, and matter–antimatter asymmetry. In this paradigm, the Standard Model is only one sector among many, and dark matter arises as the gravitational superposition of independent sectoral components rather than a single particle species. Version 2 substantially expands the original formulation. It develops the full cosmological dynamics of a multi‑sector Universe, including sector‑dependent expansion histories, effective equations of state, vacuum‑energy superposition, and the emergence of dark energy from aggregated sectoral contributions. It further analyzes multi‑scale structure formation, the absence of annihilation signatures, and the sector‑by‑sector generation of baryon asymmetry under globally conserved baryon number. This version introduces two benchmark models—a minimal two‑sector model and a three‑sector model—to illustrate concrete and testable predictions. These include nonzero ΔNₑff from hidden radiation, modified matter–radiation equality, percent‑level deviations in H (z), sector‑dependent growth rates, and distinctive gravitational‑lensing and CMB signatures. The framework also predicts sector‑specific phase transitions that may generate multi‑peaked stochastic gravitational‑wave backgrounds, as well as possible non‑synchronous reheating and ultra‑weak fluctuations in the effective dark‑energy density (“dark vacuum flicker”). The multi‑sector paradigm provides a unified structural generalization of many existing ideas—multi‑component dark matter, asymmetric dark matter, hidden‑sector models, atomic dark matter, and scalar‑field dark matter—while remaining fully consistent with ΛCDM as a special limiting case. This preprint documents the foundational structure, phenomenology, and observational consequences of the multi‑sector Universe, and serves as a reference for future theoretical development and observational tests.
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XiaoRong Zhao (Thu,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69d8955f6c1944d70ce0659f — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19475715
XiaoRong Zhao
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