TL;DR
This paper investigates whether primordial magnetic fields generated during the quark confinement phase transition can produce a gravitational wave background detectable by pulsar timing arrays, constraining early universe conditions and magnetic field properties.
Contribution
It models the gravitational wave signal from early Universe magnetic turbulence using simulations and analytical approximations, linking it to PTA observations and cosmological constraints.
Findings
Constrained the magnetic field generation temperature to 1-200 MeV.
Determined the magnetic field amplitude must exceed 1% of radiation energy density.
Showed magnetic decay can alleviate the Hubble tension and be tested by gamma-ray observations.
Abstract
The NANOGrav, Parkes, European, and International Pulsar Timing Array (PTA) Collaborations have reported evidence for a common-spectrum process that can potentially correspond to a stochastic gravitational wave background (SGWB) in the 1--100 nHz frequency range. We consider the scenario in which this signal is produced by magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) turbulence in the early Universe, induced by a nonhelical primordial magnetic field at the energy scale corresponding to the quark confinement phase transition. We perform MHD simulations to study the dynamical evolution of the magnetic field and compute the resulting SGWB. We show that the SGWB output from the simulations can be very well approximated by assuming that the magnetic anisotropic stress is constant in time, over a time interval related to the eddy turnover time. The analytical spectrum that we derive under this assumption…
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