The clustering of galaxies in the SDSS-III Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey: weighing the neutrino mass using the galaxy power spectrum of the CMASS sample
Gong-Bo Zhao, Shun Saito, Will J. Percival, Ashley J. Ross, Francesco, Montesano, Matteo Viel, Donald P. Schneider, David J. Ernst, Marc Manera,, Jordi Miralda-Escude, Nicholas P. Ross, Lado Samushia, Ariel G. Sanchez,, Molly E. C. Swanson, Daniel Thomas, Rita Tojeiro

TL;DR
This paper uses galaxy power spectrum data from SDSS-III BOSS to measure neutrino masses and other cosmological parameters, providing tighter constraints and analyzing various systematic effects in the context of different cosmological models.
Contribution
It presents the first constraints on neutrino masses using the SDSS-III BOSS galaxy power spectrum combined with other cosmological data, and investigates the impact of modeling choices on these measurements.
Findings
Neutrino mass sum $oxed{ extless}0.340$ eV (flat $ extLambda$CDM)
Number of neutrino species $N_{ m eff}=4.308 extpm0.794$
Hubble parameter $H_0=69.72^{+0.90}_{-0.91}$ km/s/Mpc
Abstract
We measure the sum of the neutrino particle masses using the three-dimensional galaxy power spectrum of the SDSS-III Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (BOSS) Data Release 9 (DR9) CMASS galaxy sample. Combined with the cosmic microwave background (CMB), supernova (SN) and additional baryonic acoustic oscillation (BAO) data, we find upper 95 percent confidence limits of the neutrino mass eV within a flat CDM background, and eV, assuming a more general background cosmological model. The number of neutrino species is measured to be and for these two cases respectively. We study and quantify the effect of several factors on the neutrino measurements, including the galaxy power spectrum bias model, the effect of redshift-space distortion, the cutoff scale of the power…
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