No ๐œˆs is Good News

ORAL โ€‚ยทโ€‚Invited

Abstract

Cosmological measurement of the absolute mass scale of neutrinos is a long-anticipated product of ongoing and upcoming cosmological surveys. The recent release of baryon acoustic oscillation (BAO) data from the first year of DESI, when combined with observations of the cosmic microwave background (CMB), has pushed our precision toward the level necessary to detect the cosmological impact of neutrino mass. However, analysis of these datasets has led to surprising results. The upper limit on the sum of neutrino masses is tighter than anticipated, and in fact, the cosmological measurements favor a negative sum of neutrino masses. I will discuss how this inference shows a preference for excess cosmological clustering. I will show how excess clustering might be explained by models of new physics which have not yet been ruled out by other observations, and which in many cases make new predictions that can be observationally tested with near-future data.

*This work is supported by the US Department of Energy under grant DE-SC0010129.

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Publication: 1) https://arxiv.org/abs/2405.00836 2) https://arxiv.org/abs/2407.07878

Presenters

  • Joel Meyers

    • Southern Methodist University

Authors

  • Joel Meyers

    • Southern Methodist University
  • Nathaniel Craig

    • University of California, Santa Barbara
  • Daniel Green

    • University of California, San Diego
  • Surjeet Rajendran

    • The Johns Hopkins University