TL;DR
This paper explores the potential for detecting the Cosmic Neutrino Background through relic neutrino capture on tritium, especially in non-standard cosmological models with larger neutrino masses, and provides tools for assessing experimental sensitivity.
Contribution
It introduces a framework to evaluate CNB detection prospects in alternative cosmologies with large neutrino masses and offers a publicly available code for sensitivity calculations.
Findings
Detection prospects improve in models with larger neutrino masses.
Standard cosmology constraints make CNB detection very challenging.
A simple rule for experimental parameter requirements is provided.
Abstract
The Cosmic Neutrino Background (CNB) is a definite prediction of the standard cosmological model and its direct discovery would represent a milestone in cosmology and neutrino physics. In this work, we consider the capture of relic neutrinos on a tritium target as a possible way to detect the CNB, as aimed for by the PTOLEMY project. Crucial parameters for this measurement are the absolute neutrino mass and the local neutrino number density . Within the CDM model, cosmology provides a stringent upper limit on the sum of neutrino masses of , with further improvements expected soon from galaxy surveys by DESI and EUCLID. This makes the prospects for a CNB detection and a neutrino mass measurement in the laboratory very difficult. In this context, we consider a set of non-standard cosmological models that allow for large…
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