This manuscript is currently under review at Foundations of Physics. This paper is part of a research program proposing that the cosmological constant arises not from total vacuum energy but from the finite-domain residual to which gravity actually couples. This paper develops the second component of a research program examining the consequences of finite-domain vacuum energy for the cosmological constant problem. The cosmological constant problem—the approximately 10¹²⁰ discrepancy between quantum field theoretic estimates of vacuum energy density and cosmological observation—is widely regarded as one of the deepest unsolved problems in theoretical physics. This paper argues that the discrepancy arises not from a failed prediction but from a category-level mismatch: the comparison of two fundamentally different quantities computed for two fundamentally different systems. The quantum field theoretic vacuum energy sum represents the total zero-point energy of a maximally symmetric ground state defined within an infinite-domain idealization. This energy is the energy of a state—a perfectly symmetric superposition across all field modes—and does not constitute a gravitationally operative quantity. In the real universe, however, the causal domain is finite. Within a finite domain, cancellation of vacuum contributions is imperfect, and a small residual survives. This residual is not state-energy. It is real, actualized energy—the non-cancelled remainder of an imperfectly symmetric finite system—and gravity couples to it through the renormalized expectation value of the stress-energy tensor. Although uniformly distributed throughout the domain, its uniformity arises from the structural character of long-wavelength mode survival across the domain, not from the maximal symmetry of the ground state. This residual is dark energy. Its constancy despite cosmic expansion is explained by a self-balancing mechanism: as the domain grows, newly available long-wavelength modes carry lower frequency (less raw energy per mode) but survive cancellation more effectively, and the two effects compensate. The 10¹²⁰ discrepancy is recharacterized once it is recognized as a comparison between the total mode content of an idealized infinite system and the finite-domain residual to which gravity actually couples. The paper develops this argument through a formal distinction among three categories of energy—state-energy, residual energy, and thing-energy—and demonstrates that this framework is consistent with established physics, explains the success of renormalization, and generates specific empirical consequences distinguishing it from competing approaches. Series Context This paper forms the second component of the Finite-Domain Vacuum Energy research program examining the cosmological constant problem. The series develops a framework in which the observed cosmological constant is interpreted not as the total vacuum energy of quantum field theory but as the residual vacuum energy that survives symmetry cancellation within the finite causal domain of the universe. Paper 1 establishes the observational and conceptual foundations of the framework. The present paper identifies the category-level mismatch underlying the cosmological constant problem and introduces the distinction between vacuum state-energy and the finite-domain residual that couples to gravity. Subsequent papers develop the gravitational consistency conditions and cosmological implications of this framework.
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Barbara Rhodes
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Barbara Rhodes (Mon,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69b2588496eeacc4fcec844c — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18918096