Neutrino mass from cosmology: Impact of high-accuracy measurement of the Hubble constant
Toyokazu Sekiguchi, Kazuhide Ichikawa, Tomo Takahashi, Lincoln, Greenhill

TL;DR
This study demonstrates how high-accuracy measurements of the Hubble constant, combined with CMB and BAO data, can significantly tighten constraints on neutrino mass, potentially enabling detection of very low neutrino masses in future surveys.
Contribution
It provides new, tighter upper limits on neutrino mass using improved H_0 measurements and explores future prospects with upcoming data from Planck and BOSS.
Findings
Upper limit of m_nu < 0.2 eV (95% C.L.) with current data.
Potential for 5 sigma detection of m_nu = 0.1 eV with future measurements.
Next-generation data could constrain m_nu < 0.05-0.06 eV.
Abstract
Non-zero neutrino mass would affect the evolution of the Universe in observable ways, and a strong constraint on the mass can be achieved using combinations of cosmological data sets. We focus on the power spectrum of cosmic microwave background (CMB) anisotropies, the Hubble constant H_0, and the length scale for baryon acoustic oscillations (BAO) to investigate the constraint on the neutrino mass, m_nu. We analyze data from multiple existing CMB studies (WMAP5, ACBAR, CBI, BOOMERANG, and QUAD), recent measurement of H_0 (SHOES), with about two times lower uncertainty (5%) than previous estimates, and recent treatments of BAO from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS). We obtained an upper limit of m_nu < 0.2eV (95% C.L.), for a flat LambdaCDM model. This is a 40% reduction in the limit derived from previous H_0 estimates and one-third lower than can be achieved with extant CMB and BAO…
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