Gravitational footprints of massive neutrinos and lepton number breaking
Andrea Addazi, Antonino Marcian\`o, Ant\'onio P. Morais, Roman, Pasechnik, Rahul Srivastava, Jos\'e W. F. Valle

TL;DR
This paper explores how primordial gravitational waves from phase transitions related to neutrino mass generation could be detected, offering a new way to test neutrino physics models.
Contribution
It demonstrates that certain neutrino mass models with spontaneously broken lepton number can produce detectable gravitational wave signals, linking neutrino physics with gravitational wave astronomy.
Findings
Strong FOPTs in majoron-like schemes produce detectable GWs.
GW spectra differ between high-scale and low-scale seesaw models.
Constraints from Higgs decays affect GW detectability.
Abstract
We investigate the production of primordial Gravitational Waves (GWs) arising from First Order Phase Transitions (FOPTs) associated to neutrino mass generation in the context of type-I and inverse seesaw schemes. We examine both "high-scale" as well as "low-scale" variants, with either explicit or spontaneously broken lepton number symmetry in the neutrino sector. In the latter case, a pseudo-Goldstone majoron-like boson may provide a candidate for cosmological dark matter. We find that schemes with softly-broken and with single Higgs-doublet scalar sector lead to either no FOPTs or too weak FOPTs, precluding the detectability of GWs in present or near future measurements. Nevertheless, we found that, in the majoron-like seesaw scheme with spontaneously broken at finite temperatures, one can have strong FOPTs and non-trivial primordial GW spectra which can…
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