Tensor Modes in Bigravity: Primordial to Present
Matthew Johnson, Alexandra Terrana

TL;DR
This paper investigates the behavior of primordial gravitational waves in massive bigravity, revealing how different cosmological backgrounds influence observable tensor perturbations and their compatibility with current observations.
Contribution
It analyzes tensor perturbations in bigravity, showing how initial conditions and background choices affect gravitational wave signatures and their observational viability.
Findings
One background exhibits significant growth in large-wavelength gravitational waves.
Another background remains indistinguishable from General Relativity in observations.
Initial conditions depend strongly on the inflationary scenario and background choice.
Abstract
Massive bigravity, a theoretically consistent modification of general relativity with an additional dynamical rank two tensor, successfully describes the observed accelerated expansion of the Universe without a cosmological constant. Recent analyses of perturbations around a cosmological background have revealed power law instabilities in both scalar and tensor perturbations, motivating an analysis of the initial conditions, evolution, and cosmological observables to determine the viability of these theories. In this paper we focus on the tensor sector, and study a primordial stochastic gravitational wave background in massive bigravity. The phenomenology can differ from standard General Relativity due to non-trivial mixing between the two linearized tensor fluctuations in the theory, only one of which couples to matter. We study perturbations about two classes of cosmological solutions…
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