Relating gravitational wave constraints from primordial nucleosynthesis, pulsar timing, laser interferometers, and the CMB: implications for the early universe
Latham A. Boyle (CITA/Princeton), Alessandra Buonanno (Maryland)

TL;DR
This paper develops a unified framework relating gravitational wave observations from various sources to early universe physics, enabling constraints on the equation-of-state and tensor spectral index, especially for pre-BBN epochs.
Contribution
It introduces a model-independent master equation linking gravitational wave observables to early universe parameters, allowing new constraints on the equation-of-state and tensor spectral index.
Findings
Derived a new expression for the tilt of the gravitational wave spectrum.
Showed how to constrain early universe physics using combined gravitational wave data.
Provided a method to detect or limit a stiff energy component before BBN.
Abstract
We derive a general master equation relating the gravitational-wave observables r and Omega_gw(f). Here r is the tensor-to-scalar ratio, constrained by cosmic-microwave-background (CMB) experiments; and Omega_gw(f) is the energy spectrum of primordial gravitational-waves, constrained e.g. by pulsar-timing measurements, laser-interferometer experiments, and Big Bang Nucleosynthesis (BBN). Differentiating the master equation yields a new expression for the tilt d(ln Omega_gw(f))/d(ln f). The relationship between r and Omega_gw(f) depends sensitively on the uncertain physics of the early universe, and we show that this uncertainty may be encapsulated (in a model-independent way) by two quantities: w_hat(f) and nt_hat(f), where nt_hat(f) is a certain logarithmic average over nt(k) (the primordial tensor spectral index); and w_hat(f) is a certain logarithmic average over w_tilde(a) (the…
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