Probing the neutrino mass hierarchy with CMB weak lensing
Alex C. Hall, Anthony Challinor

TL;DR
This paper forecasts how future CMB experiments combined with other cosmological data can distinguish neutrino mass hierarchies and constrain their total mass, potentially providing strong evidence for the inverted hierarchy.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive forecast analysis of neutrino mass hierarchy determination using future CMB and cosmological data, highlighting the potential to distinguish hierarchies with high confidence.
Findings
Future experiments can constrain total neutrino mass to below 0.1 eV.
The inverted hierarchy can be strongly favored if the normal hierarchy is realized.
Biases from assuming the wrong hierarchy are within 1-sigma errors.
Abstract
We forecast constraints on cosmological parameters with primary CMB anisotropy information and weak lensing reconstruction with a future post-Planck CMB experiment, the Cosmic Origins Explorer (COrE), using oscillation data on the neutrino mass splittings as prior information. Our MCMC simulations in flat models with a non-evolving equation-of-state of dark energy w give typical 68% upper bounds on the total neutrino mass of 0.136 eV and 0.098 eV for the inverted and normal hierarchies respectively, assuming the total summed mass is close to the minimum allowed by the oscillation data for the respective hierarchies (0.10 eV and 0.06 eV). Including information from future baryon acoustic oscillation measurements with the complete BOSS, Type 1a supernovae distance moduli from WFIRST, and a realistic prior on the Hubble constant, these upper limits shrink to 0.118 eV and 0.080 eV for the…
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