Tests of Neutrino and Dark Radiation Models from Galaxy and CMB surveys
astro-ph.CO
/ Authors
/ Abstract
We analyze the ability of galaxy and CMB lensing surveys to constrain massive neutrinos and new models of dark radiation. We present a Fisher forecast analysis for neutrino mass constraints with the LSST galaxy survey and the CMB S4 survey. A joint analysis of the three galaxy and shear 2-point functions, along with key systematics parameters and Planck priors, constrains the neutrino masses to $\sum m_ν= 0.041\,$eV at 1-$σ$ level, comparable to constraints expected from Stage 4 CMB lensing. If low redshift information from upcoming spectroscopic surveys like DESI is included, the constraint becomes $\sum m_ν= 0.032\,$eV. These constraints are derived having marginalized over the number of relativistic species ($N_{\rm eff}$), which is somewhat degenerate with the neutrino mass. We also explore the gain by combining LSST and CMB S4, that is, using the five relevant auto- and cross-correlations of the two datasets. We conclude that advances in modeling the nonlinear regime and the measurements of other parameters are required to ensure a neutrino mass detection. Using the same datasets, we explore the ability of LSST-era surveys to test "nonstandard" models with dark radiation. We find that if evidence for dark radiation is found from $N_{\rm eff}$ measurements, the mass of the dark radiation candidate can be measured at a 1-$σ$ level of $0.162\,$eV for fermionic dark radiation, and $0.137\,$eV for bosonic dark radiation, for $ΔN_{\rm eff} = 0.15$. We also find that the NNaturalness model of Arkani-Hamed et al 2016, with extra light degrees of freedom, has a sub-percent effect on the power spectrum: even more ambitious surveys than the ones considered here will be needed to test such models.