In this paper we put forward a running coupling scenario for describing the
interaction between dark energy and dark matter. The dark sector interaction in
our scenario is free of the assumption that the interaction term Q is
proportional to the Hubble expansion rate and the energy densities of dark
sectors. We only use a time-variable coupling b(a) (with a the scale factor
of the universe) to characterize the interaction Q. We propose a
parametrization form for the running coupling b(a)=b0a+be(1−a) in which the
early-time coupling is given by a constant be, while today the coupling is
given by another constant, b0. For investigating the feature of the running
coupling, we employ three dark energy models, namely, the cosmological constant
model (w=−1), the constant w model (w=w0), and the time-dependent w
model (w(a)=w0+w1(1−a)). We constrain the models with the current
observational data, including the type Ia supernova, the baryon acoustic
oscillation, the cosmic microwave background, the Hubble expansion rate, and
the X-ray gas mass fraction data. The fitting results indicate that a
time-varying vacuum scenario is favored, in which the coupling b(z) crosses
the noninteracting line (b=0) during the cosmological evolution and the sign
changes from negative to positive. The crossing of the noninteracting line
happens at around z=0.2−0.3, and the crossing behavior is favored at about
1σ confidence level. Our work implies that we should pay more attention
to the time-varying vacuum model and seriously consider the phenomenological
construction of a sign-changeable or oscillatory interaction between dark
sectors.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures; refs added; to appear in EPJ