Improved limits on short-wavelength gravitational waves from the cosmic microwave background
Irene Sendra, Tristan L. Smith

TL;DR
This paper uses recent CMB data to set improved upper limits on the density of primordial gravitational waves, distinguishing between different initial conditions and constraining cosmic string tensions.
Contribution
It provides updated observational bounds on the cosmological gravitational wave background using the latest CMB and large-scale structure data, considering different initial conditions.
Findings
Adiabatic bound on gravitational wave density improved by a factor of 1.7.
Homogeneous initial condition bound improved by a factor of 3.5.
No evidence found for additional gravitational wave component.
Abstract
The cosmic microwave background (CMB) is affected by the total radiation density around the time of decoupling. At that epoch, neutrinos comprised a significant fraction of the radiative energy, but there could also be a contribution from primordial gravitational waves with frequencies greater than ~ 10^-15 Hz. If this cosmological gravitational wave background (CGWB) were produced under adiabatic initial conditions, its effects on the CMB and matter power spectrum would mimic massless non-interacting neutrinos. However, with homogenous initial conditions, as one might expect from certain models of inflation, pre big-bang models, phase transitions and other scenarios, the effect on the CMB would be distinct. We present updated observational bounds for both initial conditions using the latest CMB data at small scales from the South Pole Telescope (SPT) in combination with Wilkinson…
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