Massive sterile neutrinos in the Early Universe: from thermal decoupling to cosmological constraints

19 May 2021, 16:30
15m
BSM Physics Neutrinos 2

Speaker

Leonardo Mastrototaro (INFN - National Institute for Nuclear Physics)

Description

We consider heavy sterile neutrinos $\nu_s$ with mass in the range $10~\mathrm{MeV}≤m_s≤m_π∼135~\mathrm{MeV}$, which are thermally produced in the Early Universe, in collisional processes involving active neutrinos, and freezing out after the QCD phase transition. Notably, if these neutrinos decay after the active neutrino decoupling, they generate extra neutrino radiation and contribute to entropy production: they alter the value of the effective number of neutrino species $N_{\mathrm{eff}}$ and $^4\mathrm{He}$ production. We provide a detailed account of the numerical solution of the exact relevant Boltzmann equations. Finally, we also identify the parameter space allowed by current Planck satellite data and forecast the parameter space probed by future Stage-4 ground-based CMB observations, expected to match or surpass BBN sensitivity, improving the existing constraints on the sterile neutrino parameter space in both cases.

Authors

Leonardo Mastrototaro (INFN - National Institute for Nuclear Physics) Pasquale Serpico (LAPTh - CNRS & Univ. Savoie (FR)) Alessandro Mirizzi Dr Ninetta Saviano (INFN Napoli)

Presentation materials