Gravitational waves in the presence of a cosmological constant
Jos\'e Bernabeu, Dom\`enec Espriu, Daniel Puigdom\`enech

TL;DR
This paper investigates how a non-zero cosmological constant affects gravitational wave propagation, revealing modifications in amplitude and phase that could be detectable with pulsar timing arrays.
Contribution
It derives the linearized gravitational wave equations in the presence of a cosmological constant and explores their physical implications and observational prospects.
Findings
Plane waves acquire order √Λ modifications in amplitude and phase.
In certain coordinates, equations describe massive spin-2 particles.
Potential detectability of Λ effects via pulsar timing arrays.
Abstract
We derive the effects of a non-zero cosmological constant on gravitational wave propagation in the linearized approximation of general relativity. In this approximation we consider the situation where the metric can be written as , , where is the background perturbation and is a modification interpretable as a gravitational wave. For this linearization of Einstein equations is self-consistent only in certain coordinate systems. The cosmological Friedmann-Robertson-Walker coordinates do not belong to this class and the derived linearized solutions have to be reinterpreted in a coordinate system that is homogeneous and isotropic to make contact with observations. Plane waves in the linear theory acquire modifications of order…
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