The History of Inflation from Microwave Background Polarimetry and Laser Interferometry
arXiv:1409.3195 · doi:10.1103/PhysRevD.91.103529
Abstract
A period of inflation in the early universe produces a nearly scale-invariant spectrum of gravitational waves over a huge range in wavelength. If the amplitude of this gravitational wave background is large enough to be detectable with microwave background polarization measurements, it will also be detectable directly with a space-based laser interferometer. Using a Monte Carlo sampling of inflation models, we demonstrate that the combination of these two measurements will strongly constrain the expansion history during inflation and the physical mechanism driving it.
8 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in PRD, minor changes post referee report