Small neutrino masses from gravitational $\theta$-term
Gia Dvali, Lena Funcke

TL;DR
This paper proposes a topological gravitational anomaly-based mechanism for small neutrino masses, predicting late Universe phase transitions and observable effects in neutrino fluxes, cosmology, and gravitational waves.
Contribution
It introduces a novel neutrino mass generation model from gravitational $ heta$-term-induced condensates, linking topological gravity to neutrino phenomenology.
Findings
Neutrino masses emerge from a gravitational anomaly-induced condensate.
Predicted late Universe phase transition at $T\,\sim\,$meV.
Enhanced neutrino interactions could impact cosmological and astrophysical observations.
Abstract
We present how a neutrino condensate and small neutrino masses emerge from a topological formulation of gravitational anomaly. We first recapitulate how a gravitational -term leads to the emergence of a new bound neutrino state analogous to the meson of QCD. Then we show the consequent formation of a neutrino vacuum condensate, which effectively generates small neutrino masses. Afterwards we outline several phenomenological consequences of our neutrino mass generation model. The cosmological neutrino mass bound vanishes since we predict the neutrinos to be massless until the phase transition in the late Universe, . Deviations from an equal flavor rate due to enhanced neutrino decays in extraterrestrial neutrino fluxes can be observed in future IceCube data. The current cosmological neutrino background only consists of the lightest neutrinos, which, due…
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