4.4 Article

Status of Cosmic Microwave Background Observations for the Search of Primordial Gravitational Waves

Journal

UNIVERSE
Volume 8, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/universe8090489

Keywords

cosmic microwave background; polarization; gravitational waves; early universe

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The cosmic microwave background is a powerful tool for cosmology, and it could potentially provide evidence of the background of gravitational waves from the early universe. However, detecting this signal is challenging due to its weakness and the need to control systematic effects.
The cosmic microwave background (CMB) is one of the most powerful tools for cosmology. Its polarization could have imprinted the sign of an inflationary background of gravitational waves, which is supposed to have originated at 10(-38)/10(-35) seconds after the Big Bang. Detecting this background is extremely difficult because of the weakness of the signal (if any) left on the CMB polarization and because of the need to control the systematic effects. Additionally, the presence of astrophysical foregrounds, the possibility of leakage from curl-free to curl-like components, including gravitational lensing, and the instrumental noise and systematics, require sensitive detectors and smart systematic effect control. We discuss the experimental efforts spent in this field, highlighting the key observational difference and the choice that could lead, in the near future, to the detection of the curl component of the CMB polarization, a clear sign of the inflationary expansion.

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