The first data-driven bounds on the quantum decoherence of inflationary gravitational waves
Jessie de Kruijf, Giacomo Galloni, Nicola Bartolo

TL;DR
This paper derives the first data-driven bounds on quantum decoherence of inflationary gravitational waves, linking quantum interactions during inflation to observable gravitational wave signatures and constraining scenarios with current astrophysical data.
Contribution
It introduces the first bounds on quantum decoherence of primordial GWs based on observational data, connecting quantum interactions during inflation to observable effects.
Findings
Observational bounds mainly constrain strong, time-dependent interactions.
Some scenarios have not completed decoherence by end of inflation, leaving quantum signatures.
Decoherence scenarios could explain signals observed by PTA experiments.
Abstract
The (large-scale) structures we observe in the Universe are classical, but within the inflationary scenario they do originate from quantum fluctuations. This leads to the question: ''How did this quantum-to-classical transition occur?''. A potential explanation is quantum decoherence due to interactions between different fields present during inflation. The tensor modes (i.e. primordial gravitational waves) can interact with a scalar sector, causing their quantum decoherence to occur and inducing a change in the gravitational wave (GW) background. The power spectrum of these GWs can be constrained using the upper bounds found by Planck, BICEP/Keck Array, LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA, Big Bang Nucleosynthesis, and the Pulsar Timing Array detections. These impose constraints on the interaction between the fields. We find that the observational upper bounds mainly constrain scenarios with a strong…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCosmology and Gravitation Theories · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Black Holes and Theoretical Physics
