Abstract:
Discoveries in cosmology over the last few decades, using multi-band electromagnetic (EM)
observations from radio to gamma rays, have shaped our understanding of the Universe and opened a
plethora of open questions. The open questions span from the early stages of the Universe, focused on
uncovering the physical processes that governed its formation and rapid expansion, to the later evolutionary
phases characterized by a transition from dark matter domination to the current epoch dominated by dark
energy components that collectively account for ∼95% of the Universe’s total energy budget. Though
their existence is indicated by multiple independent observations, the law of physics, which governs them
remains unknown. In the coming years along with multi-band EM observations from telescopes with better
sensitivity, an independent cosmological messenger gravitational waves (GW) spanning over nearly 20
decades in frequencies will be able to probe and bring insights to these open questions from the early
phase of the Universe till the current stage, and possibly will unveil cosmic mysteries which are currently
unknown. These observations will open discovery space in the early epoch of cosmic acceleration known as
cosmic inflation, the nature of dark matter, the cosmic evolution of dark energy, the total mass of neutrinos
and beyond standard model particle physics. It will also shed light on the cosmic evolution of galaxies,
and black holes, and how their interplay has shaped the observable Universe. Furthermore, the area of
multi-messenger cosmology by exploring the synergy between GW, EM and neutrino observations will
bring to light several uncharted territories in cosmology and fundamental physics. This document provides
a summary of the current progress in cosmology and outlines future directions and prospects in the field.