6533b86efe1ef96bd12cc8d4

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Relic neutrinos, thermal axions, and cosmology in early 2014

Eleonora Di ValentinoMassimiliano LattanziElena GiusarmaOlga MenaAlessandro Melchiorri

subject

PhysicsSterile neutrinoParticle physicsNuclear and High Energy PhysicsCosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics (astro-ph.CO)Cosmic microwave backgroundHigh Energy Physics::PhenomenologyCosmic background radiationFOS: Physical sciencesFísicaAstrophysicsAstrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics7. Clean energyOmegaBaryonsymbols.namesakeHigh Energy Physics - PhenomenologyHigh Energy Physics - Phenomenology (hep-ph)13. Climate actionsymbolsAstronomiaNeutrinoAxionHubble's lawAstrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics

description

We present up to date cosmological bounds on the sum of active neutrino masses as well as on extended cosmological scenarios with additional thermal relics, as thermal axions or sterile neutrino species. Our analyses consider all the current available cosmological data in the beginning of year 2014, including the very recent and most precise Baryon Acoustic Oscillation (BAO) measurements from the Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey. In the minimal three active neutrino scenario, we find Sum m_nu < 0.22 eV at 95% CL from the combination of CMB, BAO and Hubble Space Telescope measurements of the Hubble constant. A non zero value for the sum of the three active neutrino masses of about 0.3 eV is significantly favoured at more than 3 standard deviations when adding the constraints on sigma_8 and Omega_m from the Planck Cluster catalog on galaxy number counts. This preference for non zero thermal relic masses disappears almost completely in both the thermal axion and massive sterile neutrino schemes. Extra light species contribute to the effective number of relativistic degrees of freedom, parameterised via Neff. We found that when the recent detection of B mode polarization from the BICEP2 experiment is considered, an analysis of the combined CMB data in the framework of LCDM+r models gives Neff=4.00pm0.41, suggesting the presence of an extra relativistic relic at more than 95 % c.l. from CMB-only data.

10.1103/physrevd.90.043507http://hdl.handle.net/11573/810325