Framework for describing perturbations to the cosmic microwave background from a gravitational wave burst with memory
Dustin R. Madison

TL;DR
This paper develops a formalism to describe how gravitational wave bursts with memory (BWMs) affect the temperature fluctuations in the cosmic microwave background, revealing complex mode mixing and long-term perturbations.
Contribution
It introduces a new formalism for modeling BWM effects on the CMB, focusing on planar gravitational wave fronts to simplify calculations.
Findings
BWM can cause mode mixing in the CMB temperature pattern.
Perturbations depend on the unperturbed CMB across all angular scales.
The formalism facilitates future detailed analyses of BWM impacts.
Abstract
Gravitational wave bursts with memory (BWMs) can generate measurable, long-lived frequency shifts and permanent angular deflections in distant sources of light. These perturbations vary across the sky with a characteristic spatial pattern and evolve slowly over long periods of time. In this work, we develop formalism that can be used to describe how a BWM influences the spatial pattern of temperature fluctuations in the cosmic microwave background (CMB). We limit our attention to planar gravitational wave fronts -- this assumption dramatically simplifies the necessary calculations. Using toy models of the CMB's primary temperature variation pattern, we demonstrate that a BWM can mix power from a spherical harmonic mode of a certain degree into modes of various other degrees with vastly different values. In other words, BWM-induced perturbations to the CMB at any angular scale depend…
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