As explained above, my work has shown how the large scale dynamics of the Universe might be easily described using standard tools that have been developed for decades to study a variety of physical phenomena ranging from subatomic particles to condensed matter systems. The project has deepened into the description of dark energy as a continuous medium, showing how the properties of such a system may be used to describe the global properties and dynamics of the Universe at very large scales. It has thus given insights on how to test dark energy from the effects of small fluctuations in the fabric of spacetime and from the distribution of galaxies in space. The framework that I have developed may be used in the near future to analyze and interpret the data of future ground-based and satellite observations of the Universe.
I have also proposed a very minimal extension of the Standard Model of particle physics which aims to connect several long-standing problems of particle physics and cosmology. In particular, I have explored how the homogeneity and isotropy of the Universe, the unbalance between the amount of matter and antimatter, the symmetry properties of the binding force of nuclei, the small mass of the neutrinos and the origin of the dark matter, may all be related in a simple and testable model.
My work has also been devoted to study two other possibilities for dark matter. One, that it may be a composite particle (i.e. made of yet more fundamental particles) connected to the origin of the mass of the Higgs boson. And the other, completely different, that the dark matter might be atomic-sized black holes produced at the very early stages of the life of our Universe.