Self-interacting neutrinos in light of large-scale structure data
Adam He, Rui An, Mikhail M. Ivanov, Vera Gluscevic
Abstract
We explore a self-interacting neutrino cosmology in which neutrinos experience a delayed onset of free-streaming. We use the effective field theory of large-scale structure (LSS) to model matter distribution on mildly nonlinear scales within the self-interacting neutrino cosmology for the first time. We perform the first combined likelihood analysis of BOSS full-shape galaxy clustering, weak lensing, and Lyman-$\ensuremath{\alpha}$ forest measurements, together with the cosmic microwave background (CMB) data from Planck. We find that the full dataset strongly favors presence of a flavor-universal neutrino self-interaction, with a characteristic energy scale of order 10 MeV. The preference is at the $\ensuremath{\sim}5\ensuremath{\sigma}$ level and is primarily driven by the Lyman-$\ensuremath{\alpha}$ forest measurements and, to a lesser extent, the weak lensing data from the Dark Energy Survey (DES). The self-interacting neutrino model eases both the Hubble tension and the ${S}_{8}$ tension between different cosmological datasets, but it does not resolve either. Finally, we note a preference for a nonzero sum of neutrino masses at the level of $\ensuremath{\sim}0.3\text{ }\text{ }\mathrm{eV}$ under this model, consistent with previous bounds. These results call for further investigation in several directions, and may have significant implications for neutrino physics and for future new-physics searches with galaxy surveys.