Abstract
Abstract
The era of Gravitational-Wave (GW) astronomy will grant the detection of the astrophysical
GW background from unresolved mergers of binary black holes, and the prospect of probing the
presence of primordial GW backgrounds. In particular, the low-frequency tail of the GW spectrum
for causally-generated primordial signals (like a phase transition) offers an excellent
opportunity to measure unambiguously cosmological parameters as the equation of state of the
universe, or free-streaming particles at epochs well before recombination. We discuss whether
this programme is jeopardised by the uncertainties on the astrophysical GW foregrounds that
coexist with a primordial background. We detail the motivated assumptions under which the
astrophysical foregrounds can be assumed to be known in shape, and only uncertain in their
normalisation. In this case, the sensitivity to a primordial signal can be computed by a simple
and numerically agile procedure, where the optimal filter function subtracts the components of the
astrophysical foreground that are close in spectral shape to the signal. We show that the
degradation of the sensitivity to the signal in presence of astrophysical foregrounds is limited
to a factor of a few, and only around the frequencies where the signal is closer to the
foregrounds. Our results highlight the importance of modelling the contributions of eccentric or
intermediate-mass black hole binaries to the GW background, to consolidate the prospects to
perform precision cosmology with primordial GW backgrounds.
Subject
Astronomy and Astrophysics
Cited by
6 articles.
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