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Neutrino phenomenology of very low-energy seesaw scenarios

Publication Type : Journal Article

Source : Physical Review D

Url : https://journals.aps.org/prd/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevD.75.013003

Campus : Amritapuri

School : School of Physical Sciences

Year : 2007

Abstract : The standard model augmented by the presence of gauge-singlet right-handed neutrinos proves to be an ideal scenario for accommodating nonzero neutrino masses. Among the new parameters of this “new standard model” are right-handed neutrino Majorana masses M . Theoretical prejudice points to M much larger than the electroweak symmetry breaking scale, but it has recently been emphasized that all M values are technically natural and should be explored. Indeed, M around 1 – 10     eV can accommodate an elegant oscillation solution to the liquid scintillator neutrino detector (LSND) anomaly, while other M values lead to several observable consequences. We consider the phenomenology of low-energy ( M ≲ 1     keV ) seesaw scenarios. By exploring such a framework with three right-handed neutrinos, we can consistently fit all oscillation data—including those from LSND—while partially addressing several astrophysical puzzles, including anomalous pulsar kicks, heavy element nucleosynthesis in supernovae, and the existence of warm dark matter. In order to accomplish all of this, we find that a nonstandard cosmological scenario is required. Finally, low-energy seesaws—regardless of their relation to the LSND anomaly—can also be tested by future tritium beta-decay experiments, neutrinoless double-beta decay searches, and other observables. We estimate the sensitivity of such probes to M .

Cite this Research Publication : André de Gouvêa, James Jenkins, and Nirmala Vasudevan, Neutrino phenomenology of very low-energy seesaw scenarios, Physical Review D.

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