The $\nu$ generation: present and future constraints on neutrino masses from cosmology and laboratory experiments
Martina Gerbino, Massimiliano Lattanzi, Alessandro Melchiorri

TL;DR
This paper combines cosmological and laboratory data to constrain neutrino masses, providing current limits and forecasts for future experiments, highlighting the importance of nuclear modeling uncertainties.
Contribution
It offers a comprehensive Bayesian analysis of current neutrino mass constraints and forecasts sensitivities of upcoming experiments considering nuclear modeling uncertainties.
Findings
Current data constrain $m_{\beta\beta}$ to less than 0.045 eV at 95% C.L.
Future experiments could measure total neutrino mass with 0.05 eV accuracy.
Nuclear modeling uncertainties significantly impact future sensitivity forecasts.
Abstract
We perform a joint analysis of current data from cosmology and laboratory experiments to constrain the neutrino mass parameters in the framework of bayesian statistics, also accounting for uncertainties in nuclear modeling, relevant for neutrinoless double decay () searches. We find that a combination of current oscillation, cosmological and data constrains () at 95\% C.L. for normal (inverted) hierarchy. This result is in practice dominated by the cosmological and oscillation data, so it is not affected by uncertainties related to the interpretation of data, like nuclear modeling, or the exact particle physics mechanism underlying the process. We then perform forecasts for forthcoming and next-generation experiments, and find that in the case…
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