Gravitational wave cosmology in Einstein-scalar-Gauss-Bonnet gravity (2503.01975v1)
Abstract: In the framework of Einstein-scalar-Gauss-Bonnet (EsGB) gravity, we systematically study gravitational waves (GWs), first produced by remote compact astrophysical sources and then propagating through the flat homogeneous and isotropic Universe at cosmic distances before arriving at detectors. Assuming that the speed $c_T$ of the spin-2 graviton is the same as that of photons, we find explicitly the stability conditions of the theory and then obtain the severest observational constraint found so far. In particular, all these conditions and constraints are satisfied, provided that $0 \leq \alpha\dot{f}(\phi_0) \lesssim 8.97 \times 10{-24}$ (km), where $\alpha{f}(\phi)$ denotes the coupling strength between the scalar field $\phi$ and the Gauss-Bonnet term, an over-dot represents the derivative with respect to the cosmic time, and $\phi_0$ is the present value of $\phi$. The trajectories for both spin-2 and spin-0 gravitons and the amplitudes of GWs along the trajectories are explicitly obtained. The amplitude of a spin-2 GW is practically indistinguishable from that of GR, while the spin-0 GWs remain almost constant during radiation- and matter-dominated epochs, and in the dark energy-dominated epoch it is proportional to the physical distance between the source and the observer. A careful analysis shows that the latter is due to the assumption $c_T = 1$. When $c_T \not= 1$ to the extent that is consistent with the stability conditions and observational constraints, the above behavior disappears.
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