8–10 May 2023
University of Pittsburgh
US/Eastern timezone

Freezing-In Gravitational Waves

9 May 2023, 14:45
15m
Lawrence Hall 205

Lawrence Hall 205

Speaker

Jan Schütte-Engel

Description

The thermal plasma in the early universe produced a stochastic gravitational wave (GW) background, which peaks today in the microwave regime and was dubbed the cosmic gravitational microwave background (CGMB). In previous works only single graviton production processes that contribute to the CGMB have been considered. In this talk we also investigate graviton pair production processes and show that these can lead to a significant contribution if the ratio between the maximum temperature and the Planck mass, $T_{\rm max}/m_{\rm p}$, divided by the internal coupling in the heat bath is large enough. As the dark matter freeze-in production mechanism is conceptually very similar to the GW production mechanism from the primordial thermal plasma, we refer to the latter as ``GW freeze-in production''. We also show that quantum gravity effects arising in single graviton production are smaller than the leading order result by a factor $(T_{\rm max}/m_{\rm p})^2$.

Primary authors

Enrico Speranza (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign) Jacopo GHIGLIERI Jan Schütte-Engel

Presentation materials