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Gravitational footprints of massive neutrinos and lepton number breaking

Authors :
Addazi, Andrea
Marcianò, Antonino
Morais, António P.
Pasechnik, Roman
Srivastava, Rahul
Valle, José W. F.
Publication Year :
2019

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 $U(1)_L$ 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 $U(1)_L$ 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 $U(1)_L$ at finite temperatures, one can have strong FOPTs and non-trivial primordial GW spectra which can fall well within the frequency and amplitude sensitivity of upcoming experiments, including LISA, BBO and u-DECIGO. However, GWs observability clashes with invisible Higgs decay constraints from the LHC. A simple and consistent fix is to assume the majoron-like mass to lie above the Higgs-decay kinematical threshold. We also found that the majoron-like variant of the low-scale seesaw mechanism implies a different GW spectrum than the one expected in the high-scale seesaw. This feature will be testable in future experiments. Our analysis shows that GWs can provide a new and complementary portal to test the neutrino mass generation mechanism.<br />Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures, 4 tables; invisible Higgs decay constraint incorporated; discussion extended; references added

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1909.09740
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.physletb.2020.135577