Academic Thesis

Basic information

Name Yamauchi Daisuke
Belonging department Physics
Occupation name
researchmap researcher code B000327615
researchmap agency Okayama University of Science

Title

Future detectability of gravitational-wave induced lensing from high-sensitivity CMB experiments

Bibliography Type

Joint Author

Author

Toshiya Namikawa, Daisuke Yamauchi, Atushi Taruya

Summary

We discuss the future detectability of gravitational-wave induced lensing from high-sensitivity cosmic microwave background (CMB) experiments. Gravitational waves can induce a rotational component of the weak-lensing deflection angle, usually referred to as the curl mode, which would be imprinted on the CMB maps. Using the technique of reconstructing lensing signals involved in CMB maps, this curl mode can be measured in an unbiased manner, offering an independent confirmation of the gravitational waves complementary to B-mode polarization experiments. Based on the Fisher matrix analysis, we first show that with the noise levels necessary to confirm the consistency relation for the primordial gravitational waves, the future CMB experiments will be able to detect the gravitational-wave induced lensing signals. For a tensor-to-scalar ratio of ? ≲0.1, even if the consistency relation is difficult to confirm with a high significance, the gravitational-wave induced lensing will be detected at more than 3⁢? significance level. Further, we point out that high-sensitivity experiments will be also powerful to constrain the gravitational waves generated after the recombination epoch. Compared to the B-mode polarization, the curl mode is particularly sensitive to gravitational waves generated at low redshifts (? ≲10) with a low frequency (?≲1⁢0−3  Mpc−1), and it could give a much tighter constraint on their energy density ΩGW by more than 3 orders of magnitude.

Magazine(name)

Physical Review D

Publisher

Volume

91

Number Of Pages

043531

StartingPage

EndingPage

Date of Issue

2015/02

Referee

Exist

Invited

Not exist

Language

English

Thesis Type

Research papers (academic journals)

ISSN

DOI

https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.91.043531

NAID

PMID

URL

J-GLOBAL ID

arXiv ID

1411.7427

ORCID Put Code

DBLP ID