Ultra-low-frequency gravitational waves from cosmological and astrophysical processes
Moore, Christopher J.; Vecchio, Alberto
United Kingdom
Abstract
Gravitational waves at ultra-low frequencies (≲100 nHz) are key to understanding the assembly and evolution of astrophysical black hole binaries with masses ~106-109 M⊙ at low redshifts1-3. These gravitational waves also offer a unique window into a wide variety of cosmological processes4-11. Pulsar timing arrays12-14 are beginning to measure15 this stochastic signal at ~1-100 nHz and the combination of data from several arrays16-19 is expected to confirm a detection in the next few years20. The dominant physical processes generating gravitational radiation at nHz frequencies are still uncertain. Pulsar timing array observations alone are currently unable21 to distinguish a binary black hole astrophysical foreground22 from a cosmological background due to, say, a first-order phase transition at a temperature ~1-100 MeV in a weakly interacting dark sector8-11. This letter explores the extent to which incorporating integrated bounds on the ultra-low-frequency gravitational wave spectrum from any combination of cosmic microwave background23,24, big bang nucleosynethesis25,26 or astrometric27,28 observations can help to break this degeneracy.