Observational evidence suggests that the large scale dynamics of the universe
is presently dominated by dark energy, meaning a non-luminous cosmological
constituent with a negative value of the pressure to density ratio w=P/ρ,
which would be unstable if purely fluid, but could be stable if effectively
solid with sufficient rigidity. It was suggested by Bucher and Spergel that
such a solid constituent might be constituted by an effectively cold (meaning
approximately static) distribution of cosmic strings with w=−1/3, or
membranes with the observationally more favoured value w=−2/3, but it was not
established whether the rigidity in such models actually would be sufficient
for stabilisation. The present article provides an explicit evaluation of the
rigidity to density ratio, which is shown to be given in both string and
membrane cases by μ/ρ=4/15, and it is confirmed that this is indeed
sufficient for stabilisation.Comment: 6 pages latex, revised version extended to include 4 figure