Primary gravitational waves at high frequencies I: Origin of suppression in the power spectrum
Alipriyo Hoory, Jerome Martin, Arnab Paul, L. Sriramkumar

TL;DR
This paper investigates the high-frequency power spectrum of primordial gravitational waves generated during inflation, demonstrating that regularization and smooth transitions suppress unphysical behaviors and oscillations at small scales.
Contribution
The study introduces a regularization method and smoothing techniques to accurately model the high-frequency behavior of primordial gravitational waves.
Findings
Regularization truncates the unphysical k^2 rise in the power spectrum.
Smoothing the transition from inflation to radiation domination suppresses oscillations.
Oscillations in the power spectrum have a zero mean and are affected by the smoothness of the transition.
Abstract
[Abridged] The primary gravitational waves (PGWs) are generated in the early universe from the quantum vacuum during inflation. In slow roll inflation, the power spectrum (PS) of PGWs over large scales, which leave the Hubble radius during inflation, is nearly scale-invariant. However, over very small scales, which never leave the Hubble radius, the PS of PGWs behaves as k^2, where k denotes the wave number. We examine the PS of PGWs at such high wave numbers or frequencies when the PGWs are evolved post-inflation, through the epochs of radiation and matter domination. Firstly, we argue that the PS has to be regularized in order to truncate the unphysical k^2 rise at high frequencies. Assuming instantaneous transitions from inflation to the epochs of radiation and matter domination, we carry out the method of adiabatic regularization to arrive at the PS of PGWs over a wide range of…
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