No new cosmological concordance with massive sterile neutrinos
Abstract
It has been claimed recently that massive sterile neutrinos could bring about a new concordance between observations of the cosmic microwave background (CMB), the large-scale structure (LSS) of the Universe, and local measurements of the Hubble constant, H0. We demonstrate that this apparent concordance results from combining datasets which are in significant tension, even within this extended model, possibly indicating remaining systematic biases in the measurements. We further show that this tension remains when the cosmological model is further extended to include significant tensor modes, as suggested by the recent BICEP2 results. Using the Bayesian evidence, we show that the minimal model is strongly favoured over its neutrino extensions by various combinations of datasets. Robust data combinations yield stringent limits of Σ m0.3 eV and m, sterile eff 0.3 eV at 95\% CL for the sum of active and sterile neutrinos, respectively.
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