Probing Cosmic Expansion and Early Universe with Einstein Telescope
Angelo Ricciardone, Mairi Sakellariadou, Archisman Ghosh, Alessandro Agapito, M. Celeste Artale, Michael Bacchi, Tessa Baker, Marco Baldi, Nicola Bartolo, Andrea Begnoni, Enis Belgacem, Marek Biesiada, Jose J. Blanco-Pillado, Tomasz Bulik, Marica Branchesi, Gianluca Calcagni

TL;DR
The Einstein Telescope will significantly enhance gravitational-wave observations, enabling insights into cosmic expansion, dark matter, and the early universe beyond current electromagnetic methods.
Contribution
This paper discusses the potential of the Einstein Telescope to probe fundamental cosmological questions through advanced gravitational-wave detection capabilities.
Findings
ET will observe binary mergers at higher redshifts.
ET will detect gravitational-wave backgrounds of cosmological origin.
ET will complement electromagnetic surveys in understanding the early universe.
Abstract
Over the next two decades, gravitational-wave (GW) observations are expected to evolve from a discovery-driven endeavour into a precision tool for astrophysics, cosmology, and fundamental physics. Current second-generation ground-based detectors have established the existence of compact-binary mergers and enabled GW multi-messenger astronomy, but they remain limited in sensitivity, redshift reach, frequency coverage, and duty cycle. These limitations prevent them from addressing many fundamental open questions in cosmology. By the 2040s, wide-field electromagnetic surveys will have mapped the luminous Universe with unprecedented depth and accuracy. Nevertheless, key problems including the nature of dark matter, the physical origin of cosmic acceleration, the properties of gravity on cosmological scales, and the physical conditions of the earliest moments after the Big Bang will remain…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Cosmology and Gravitation Theories
