4.6 Article

Relativistic viscous effects on the primordial gravitational waves spectrum

Journal

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/1475-7516/2021/06/008

Keywords

physics of the early universe; primordial gravitational waves (theory); cosmological perturbation theory

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This study examines the impact of viscous effects of the primordial plasma on the evolution of the primordial gravitational waves (pGW) spectrum, using a second-order theory framework. Two main contributions are identified: the viscous evolution of pGW and the GW production due to initial spin-2 fluctuations of the fluid. The former effect is characterized by a relative amplitude decrease of about 1 to 10% compared to the GW free evolution spectrum.
We study the impact of the viscous effects of the primordial plasma on the evolution of the primordial gravitational waves (pGW) spectrum from Inflation until today, considering a self-consistent interaction that incorporates the back-reaction of the GW into the plasma. We use a relativistic causal hydrodynamic framework with a positive entropy production based on a Second-Order Theory (SOT) in which the viscous properties of the fluid are effectively described by a new set of independent variables. We study how the spin-2 modes typical of SOTs capture the simplest GW-fluid viscous interaction to first order. We consider that all non-ideal properties of the primordial plasma are due to an extra effectively massless self-interacting scalar field whose state becomes a many-particles one after Reheating and for which an effective fluid description is suitable. We numerically solve the evolution equations and explicitly compute the current GW spectrum obtaining two contributions. On the one hand we have the viscous evolution of the pGW: for the collision-dominated regime the GW source becomes negligible while in the collisionless limit there exists an absorption of the pGW energy due to the damping effect produced by the free-streaming spin-2 modes of the fluid and driven by the expansion of the Universe. The latter effect is characterized by a relative amplitude decrease of about 1 to 10 % with respect to the GW free evolution spectrum. On the other hand we get the GW production due to the decay of the initial spin-2 fluctuations of the fluid that is negligible compared with the above-mentioned contribution. This SOT framework captures the same qualitative effects on the evolution of GW coupled to matter reported in previous works in which a kinetic theory approach has been used.

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