Constraints on primordial gravitational waves from the Cosmic Microwave Background [CEA]

http://arxiv.org/abs/2004.11396


Searches for primordial gravitational waves have resulted in constraints in a large frequency range from a variety of sources. The standard Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) technique is to parameterise the tensor power spectrum in terms of the tensor-to-scalar ratio, $r$, and spectral index, $n_{\rm t}$, and constrain these using measurements of the temperature and polarization power spectra. Another method, applicable to modes well inside the cosmological horizon at recombination, uses the shortwave approximation, under which gravitational waves behave as an effective neutrino species. In this paper we give model-independent CMB constraints on the energy density of gravitational waves, $\Omega_\text{gw} h^2$, for the entire range of observable frequencies. On large scales, $f \lesssim 10^{-16}\, \text{Hz}$, we reconstruct the initial tensor power spectrum in logarithmic frequency bins, finding maximal sensitivity for scales close to the horizon size at recombination. On small scales, $f \gtrsim10^{-15}\,\mbox{Hz}$, we use the shortwave approximation, finding $\Omega_\text{gw} h^2 < 1.7 \times10^{-6}$ for adiabatic initial conditions and $\Omega_\text{gw} h^2 < 2.8 \times10^{-7}$ for homogeneous initial conditions (both $2\sigma$ upper limits). For scales close to the horizon size at recombination, we use second-order perturbation theory to calculate the back-reaction from gravitational waves, finding $\Omega_\text{gw} h^2 < 1.0 \times10^{-6}$.

Read this paper on arXiv…

T. Clarke, E. Copeland and A. Moss
Mon, 27 Apr 20
13/45

Comments: 29 pages, 7 figures, 1 appendix (with 1 figure). Prepared for submission to JCAP