Physical Review X (Mar 2016)

Gravitational-Wave Cosmology across 29 Decades in Frequency

  • Paul D. Lasky,
  • Chiara M. F. Mingarelli,
  • Tristan L. Smith,
  • John T. Giblin, Jr.,
  • Eric Thrane,
  • Daniel J. Reardon,
  • Robert Caldwell,
  • Matthew Bailes,
  • N. D. Ramesh Bhat,
  • Sarah Burke-Spolaor,
  • Shi Dai,
  • James Dempsey,
  • George Hobbs,
  • Matthew Kerr,
  • Yuri Levin,
  • Richard N. Manchester,
  • Stefan Osłowski,
  • Vikram Ravi,
  • Pablo A. Rosado,
  • Ryan M. Shannon,
  • Renée Spiewak,
  • Willem van Straten,
  • Lawrence Toomey,
  • Jingbo Wang,
  • Linqing Wen,
  • Xiaopeng You,
  • Xingjiang Zhu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.6.011035
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 1
p. 011035

Abstract

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Quantum fluctuations of the gravitational field in the early Universe, amplified by inflation, produce a primordial gravitational-wave background across a broad frequency band. We derive constraints on the spectrum of this gravitational radiation, and hence on theories of the early Universe, by combining experiments that cover 29 orders of magnitude in frequency. These include Planck observations of cosmic microwave background temperature and polarization power spectra and lensing, together with baryon acoustic oscillations and big bang nucleosynthesis measurements, as well as new pulsar timing array and ground-based interferometer limits. While individual experiments constrain the gravitational-wave energy density in specific frequency bands, the combination of experiments allows us to constrain cosmological parameters, including the inflationary spectral index n_{t} and the tensor-to-scalar ratio r. Results from individual experiments include the most stringent nanohertz limit of the primordial background to date from the Parkes Pulsar Timing Array, Ω_{GW}(f)<2.3×10^{-10}. Observations of the cosmic microwave background alone limit the gravitational-wave spectral index at 95% confidence to n_{t}≲5 for a tensor-to-scalar ratio of r=0.11. However, the combination of all the above experiments limits n_{t}<0.36. Future Advanced LIGO observations are expected to further constrain n_{t}<0.34 by 2020. When cosmic microwave background experiments detect a nonzero r, our results will imply even more stringent constraints on n_{t} and, hence, theories of the early Universe.