4.7 Article

Implications of the NANOGrav result on primordial gravitational waves in nonstandard cosmologies

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW D
Volume 103, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevD.103.063532

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Physical Research Laboratory, India

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The NANOGrav Collaboration reported evidence of a common-spectrum stochastic process that may be the first detection of a stochastic gravitational wave background. The signal could be explained by first- and second-order gravitational waves in nonstandard cosmological history. The observation was ruled out in standard cosmology or nonstandard kination domination epochs, while standard radiation domination could explain the observation.
Recently, the NANOGrav Collaboration has reported evidence for a common-spectrum stochastic process, which might be interpreted as the first ever detection of stochastic gravitational wave (GW) background. We discuss the possibility of the signal arising from the first- and second-order GWs in nonstandard cosmological history. We show that the NANOGrav observation can be explained by first-order GWs in the nonstandard thermal history with an early matter-dominated era, whereas the parameter space required to explain the NANOGrav observation in the standard cosmology or in the nonstandard epoch of kination domination is ruled out by the big bang nucleosynthesis and cosmic microwave background observations. For the second-order GWs arising from the large primordial scalar fluctuations, we study the standard radiation domination and two specific nonstandard cases with a few forms of the primordial power spectrum P-zeta(k) to achieve abundant primordial black hole (PBH) production. We find that the NANOGrav observation can be explained with standard radiation domination for all of these P-zeta(k). Furthermore, a dustlike epoch leads to abundant PBH formation for a lower amplitude of P-zeta(k) than the radiation-dominated case and complies with the NANOGrav observation only for a few of the P-zeta(k) forms considered here, where the peak wave number is larger than the wave number range probed by NANOGray. In this nonstandard epoch, for a broad power spectrum, PBHs are produced in a wide mass range in the planetary mass regime. A nonstandard epoch of kination domination cannot produce enough PBHs for any of the P-zeta(k) if the NANOGrav result is to be satisfied.

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