SEMINAR 2025

What Constitutes A Gravitational Wave In An Expanding Universe?

SpeakerYi-Zen Chu, National Central University, Taiwan
Date/TimeWednesday, 17 Sep, 3pm
LocationS11-02-07 Conference Room 
HostAsst/Prof Alvin Chua

Abstract

Our understanding of gravitational waves produced by isolated astrophysical systems is primarily based on gravitational perturbation theory off a flat spacetime background. This leads to the common identification of gravitational radiation with massless spin-2 waves. In this talk, I will argue that gravitational waves may no longer be solely “spin-2” in character once the background spacetime is our expanding universe instead. As a result of the mixing between gravitational and other degrees of freedom, scalar “spin-0” gravitational waves may exist during the radiation-dominated epoch of our universe; as well as during its current accelerated expansion phase – provided the main driver is not the cosmological constant, but some extra “Dark Energy” field. Moreover, during the radiation-dominated era, spin-0 Cherenkov gravitational waves may even be generated if its material source were traveling faster than 1/\sqrt{3}.

Biography

Yi-Zen Chu is a theoretical physicist and Professor at the Department of Physics, National Central University, Taiwan. He is interested in gravitation, cosmology, classical and quantum field theory, as well as Wolfram Language software development.