Precision cosmology and the stiff-amplified gravitational-wave background from inflation: NANOGrav, Advanced LIGO-Virgo and the Hubble tension
Bohua Li, Paul R. Shapiro

TL;DR
This paper explores how a stiff-amplified primordial gravitational-wave background, constrained by current data, could influence the universe's expansion and potentially alleviate the Hubble tension, linking gravitational waves with cosmological observations.
Contribution
It introduces a cosmological model combining inflation, a stiff era, and primordial gravitational waves, analyzing their joint effects on expansion history and observational constraints.
Findings
The model's SGWB remains too small to explain NANOGrav results.
It can potentially reduce the Hubble tension within current observational bounds.
Future detections of SGWB could support the model without requiring a blue tilt.
Abstract
The recent NANOGrav finding of a common-spectrum process has invited interpretations as possible evidence of a primordial stochastic gravitational-wave background (SGWB) stronger than predicted by standard inflation+LCDM. Such an SGWB would contribute an extra radiation component to the background Universe which may affect its expansion history. As such, it may help alleviate the current Hubble tension, a novel connection between gravitational waves and cosmology. We demonstrate this by considering a cosmological model, the "standard inflation + stiff amplification" scenario, with two components added to the LCDM model: a stiff component (w=1) and the primordial SGWB. Previously, we showed that even for standard inflation, the SGWB may be detectable at the high frequencies probed by laser interferometers, if it is amplified by a possible early stiff era after reheating. Models that…
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