The cosmic microwave background (CMB) is affected by the total radiation
density around the time of decoupling. At that epoch, neutrinos comprised a
significant fraction of the radiative energy, but there could also be a
contribution from primordial gravitational waves with frequencies greater than
~ 10^-15 Hz. If this cosmological gravitational wave background (CGWB) were
produced under adiabatic initial conditions, its effects on the CMB and matter
power spectrum would mimic massless non-interacting neutrinos. However, with
homogenous initial conditions, as one might expect from certain models of
inflation, pre big-bang models, phase transitions and other scenarios, the
effect on the CMB would be distinct. We present updated observational bounds
for both initial conditions using the latest CMB data at small scales from the
South Pole Telescope (SPT) in combination with Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy
Probe (WMAP), current measurements of the baryon acoustic oscillations, and the
Hubble parameter. With the inclusion of the data from SPT the adiabatic bound
on the CGWB density is improved by a factor of 1.7 to 10^6 Omega_gw < 8.7 at
the 95% confidence level (C.L.), with weak evidence in favor of an additional
radiation component consistent with previous analyses. The constraint can be
converted into an upper limit on the tension of horizon-sized cosmic strings
that could generate this gravitational wave component, with Gmu < 2 10^-7 at
95% C.L., for string tension Gmu. The homogeneous bound improves by a factor of
3.5 to 10^6 Omega_gw < 1.0 at 95% C.L., with no evidence for such a component
from current data.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure