Equivalent Neutrinos, Light WIMPs, and the Chimera of Dark Radiation
Gary Steigman

TL;DR
This paper explores how light WIMPs and equivalent neutrinos can influence the effective number of neutrinos (Neff), revealing that measurements of Neff can be consistent with various dark radiation scenarios and affect neutrino mass constraints.
Contribution
It demonstrates that Neff measurements alone cannot definitively indicate dark radiation presence, highlighting the roles of light WIMPs and their interactions in shaping Neff.
Findings
Neff>3 can occur without dark radiation due to WIMP effects.
Neff=3 does not exclude the existence of dark radiation.
Degeneracies exist among WIMP properties, neutrino types, and decoupling temperatures.
Abstract
According to conventional wisdom, in the standard model (SM) of particle physics and cosmology the effective number of neutrinos is Neff=3 (more precisely, 3.046). In extensions of the standard model allowing for the presence of DeltaNnu equivalent neutrinos (or dark radiation), Neff is generally >3. The canonical results are reconsidered here, revealing that a measurement of Neff>3 can be consistent with DeltaNnu=0 (dark radiation without dark radiation). Conversely, a measurement consistent with Neff=3 is not inconsistent with the presence of dark radiation (DeltaNnu>0). In particular, if there is a light WIMP that annihilates to photons after the SM neutrinos have decoupled, the photons are heated beyond their usual heating from e+- annihilation, reducing the late time ratio of neutrino and photon temperatures (and number densities), leading to Neff<3. This opens the window for one…
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