English

The Boundary Proposal

High Energy Physics - Theory 2025-12-01 v3 General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology

Abstract

One of the leading ideas for the beginning of the Universe is the Hartle-Hawking `No-Boundary Proposal.' Since the Cobordism Conjecture claims that any spacetime allows for a dynamical boundary, we suggest that one may equally well consider a `Boundary Proposal'. Specifically, the corresponding euclidean instanton is a sphere with two holes around north and south pole cut out. Analogously to the Hartle-Hawking proposal, the sphere is then cut in two at the equator and half of it is dropped. The equator is glued to an expanding Lorentzian de Sitter space, implementing a beginning of the Universe with a spacelike spherical boundary at its earliest moment. This process is in principle on equal footing with the one based on the no-boundary instanton. In fact, if the Linde-Vilenkin sign choice is used, this `Boundary' creation process may even dominate. An intriguing implication arises if tensionless end-of-the-world branes, as familiar from type-IIA or M-theory, are available: Analogously to the Boundary Proposal, one may then be able to create a compact, flat torus universe from nothing, without any exponential suppression or enhancement factors.

Cite

@article{arxiv.2403.18892,
  title  = {The Boundary Proposal},
  author = {Bjoern Hassfeld and Arthur Hebecker},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2403.18892},
  year   = {2025}
}

Comments

17 pages, 3 figures, v2: Improved referencing v3: Added subsection with a more detailed analysis

R2 v1 2026-06-28T15:36:02.547Z