Cosmic Baryon Asymmetry in Different Neutrino Mass Models with Mixing Angles

θ 13 by considering the three-diagonal form of Dirac neutrino mass matrices and the three aspects of leptogenesis, unflavoured, flavoured, and nonthermal.We found that the estimations of anymodels with θ 13 are consistent in all the three stages of calculations of leptogenesis and the results are better than the predictions of anymodels without θ 13 which are consistent in a piecemeal manner with the observational data in all the three stages of leptogenesis calculations. For the normal hierarchy of Type-IA with charged lepton matrix, model with and without θ 13 predicts inflaton mass required to produce the observed baryon asymmetry to beM φ ∼


Introduction
Recent measurement of a moderately large value of the third mixing angle  13 by reactor neutrino oscillation experiments around the world particularly by Daya Bay (sin 2  13 = 0.089 ± 0.010(stat) ± 0.005(syst)) [1] and RENO (sin 2  13 = 0.113 ± 0.013(stat) ± 0.019(syst)) [2] signifies an important breakthrough in establishing the standard three-flavour oscillation picture of neutrinos.Thereby, we will address the issues of the recent indication of nonmaximal 2-3 mixing by MINOS accelerator experiment [3] leading to determining the correct octant of  23 and neutrino mass hierarchy.Furthermore, now, this has opened the door to study leptonic CP violation in a convincing manner, which in turn has profound implications for our understanding of the matter-antimatter asymmetry of the universe.In fact, ascertaining the origin of the cosmological baryon asymmetry,   = (6.5 +0.4  −0.5 ) × 10 −10 [4], is one of the burning open issues in both particle physics and cosmology.The asymmetry must have been generated during the evolution of the universe.However, it is possible to dynamically generate such asymmetry if three conditions, (i) the existence of baryon number violating interactions, (ii) C and CP violations, and (iii) the deviation from thermal equilibrium, are satisfied [5].There are different mechanisms of baryogenesis, but leptogenesis [6] is attractive because of its simplicity and the connection to neutrino physics.Establishing a connection between the low-energy neutrino mixing parameters and high-energy leptogenesis parameters has received much attention in recent years in [6][7][8][9].In leptogenesis, the first condition is satisfied by the Majorana nature of heavy neutrinos and the sphaleron effect in the standard model (SM) at the high temperature [9], while the second condition is provided by their CP-violating decay.The deviation from thermal equilibrium is provided by the expansion of the universe.Needless to say the departures from thermal equilibrium have been very important without it; the past history of the universe would be irrelevant, as the present state would be merely that of a system at 2.75 K, very 2 Advances in High Energy Physics uninteresting indeed [10].One of the keys to understanding the thermal history of the universe is the estimation of cosmological baryon asymmetry from different neutrino mass models with the inclusion of the latest nonzero  13 .
Broadly the leptogenesis can be grouped into two groups: thermal with and without flavour effects and nonthermal leptogenesis.The simplest scenario, namely, the standard thermal leptogenesis, requires nothing but the thermal excitation of heavy Majorana neutrinos which generate tiny neutrino masses via the seesaw mechanism [11][12][13] and provides several implications for the light neutrino mass spectrum [14,15].And with heavy hierarchical right-handed neutrino spectrum, the CP asymmetry and the mass of the lightest right-handed Majorana neutrino are correlated.In order to have the correct order of light neutrino masssquared differences, there is a lower bound on the mass of the right-handed neutrino,   ≥ 10 9 GeV [16][17][18][19], which in turn put constraints on reheating temperature after inflation to be   ≥ 10 9 GeV.This will lead to an excessive gravitino production and conflicts with the observed data.In the postinflation era, these gravitinos are produced in a thermal bath due to annihilation or scattering processes of different standard particles.The relic abundance of gravitino is proportional to the reheating temperature of the thermal bath.One can have the right order of relic dark matter abundance only if the reheating temperature is bounded to below 10 7 GeV [8,[20][21][22][23][24].On the other hand, big-bang nucleosynthesis in SUSY theories also sets a severe constraint on the gravitino mass and the reheating temperature leading to the upper bound   ≥ 10 7 GeV [25][26][27][28][29].While thermal leptogenesis in SUSY SO (10) with high seesaw scale easily satisfies the lower bound, the tension with the gravitino constraint is manifest.
According to Fukuyama et al. [30,31], the nonthermal leptogenesis scenario in the framework of a minimal supersymmetric SO (10) model with Type-I seesaw shows that the predicted inflaton mass needed to produce the observed baryon asymmetry of the universe is found to be   ∼ 5× 10 11 GeV for the reheating temperature   = 10 6 GeV and weak scale gravitino mass  3/2 ∼ 100 GeV without causing the gravitino problem.It also claims that even if these values are relaxed by one order of magnitude ( 3/2 ≤ 10 TeV,   = 10 7 GeV), the result is still valid.In [32,33] using the Closed-Time-Path approach, they performed a systematic leading order calculation of the relaxation rate of flavour correlations of left-handed standard model leptons; and for flavoured leptogenesis in the early universe they found the reheating temperature to be   = 10 7 GeV to 10 13 GeV.These values apply to the standard model with a Higgs-boson mass of 125 GeV [34].The recent discovery of a standard model (SM) like Higgs boson provides further support for leptogenesis mechanism, where the asymmetry is generated by out-ofequilibrium decays of our conjecture heavy sterile righthanded neutrinos into a Higgs boson and a lepton.In [35] split neutrinos were introduced where there is one Dirac neutrino and two Majorana neutrinos with a slight departure from tribimaximal mixing (TBM), which explains the reactor angle ∼  13 , and tied intimately to the lepton asymmetry and can explain inflation, dark matter, neutrino masses, and the baryon asymmetry, which can be further constrained by the searches of SUSY particles at the LHC, the right-handed sneutrino, essentially the inflaton component as a dark matter candidate, and from the 0V experiments.In [36] too a deviation from TBM case was studied with model-independent discussion and the existing link between low-and highenergy parameters that connect to the parameters governing leptogenesis was analysed.However, in [37] exact TBM, tan 2  12 = 0.50, was considered with charged lepton and upquark type and set  13 to be zero; eventually their results differ from ours.We slightly modify the neutrino models in [37]; consequently the inputs parameters are different for zero  13 but for nonzero  13 our formalism is entirely different than the one done in [37]; besides we consider tan 2  12 = 0.45 for detail analysis.Our work in this paper is consistent with the values given in [30][31][32][33][34][35].Now, the theoretical framework supporting leptogenesis from low-energy phases has some other realistic testable predictions in view of nonzero  13 .So the present paper is a modest attempt to compare the predictions of leptogenesis from low-energy CP-violating phases in different neutrino mass matrices with and without  13 .The current investigation is twofold.The first part deals with zero reactor mixing angle in different neutrino mass models within - symmetry [38][39][40][41][42][43][44][45][46][47][48][49], while in the second part we construct   matrix from fitting of  PMNS incorporating the nonzero third reactor angle ( 13 ) along with the observed data and subsequently predict the baryon asymmetry of the universe (BAU).We must also mention that there are several works analysing the link between leptogenesis and low-energy data in more general scenarios.However, we have not come across in the literature where all the three categories of leptogenesis, that is, the thermal leptogenesis with or without flavour effects and nonthermal leptogenesis, are studied in a single paper.Take, for instance, some of the major players working on leptogenesis.Professor Wilfried Buchmuller works are mostly confined to standard unflavoured thermal leptogenesis by solving Boltzmann's equation whereas Professor Steven Blanchet and Professor P. Di.Bari generally worked on flavoured effects in leptogenesis and lesser people work on nonthermal leptogenesis (cf.[30,31]).But we attempt to study all the three aspects of leptogenesis in this paper, which makes our work apparently different from others on this account.
The detailed plan of the paper is as follows.In Section 2, methodology and classification of neutrino mass models for zero  13 are presented.Section 3 gives an overview of leptogenesis.The numerical and analytic results for neutrino mass models   without and with  13 are given in Sections 4 and 5, respectively.We end with conclusions in Section 6.

Methodology and Classification of Neutrino Mass Models
We begin with Type-I seesaw mechanism for estimation of BAU.The required left-handed light neutrino mass models   without  13 are given in Table 4.And   can be related Advances in High Energy Physics 3 to the right-handed Majorana mass matrix   and the Dirac mass matrix   through the inversion seesaw mechanism: where In (2) (, ) are two integers depending on the type of Dirac mass matrix we choose.Since the texture of Yukawa matrix for Dirac neutrino is not known, we take the diagonal texture of   to be of charged lepton mass matrix (6, 2), up-quark type mass matrix (8,4), or down-quark type mass matrix (4, 2), as allowed by SO(10) GUT models.
For computations of leptogenesis, we choose a basis   where ) with real and positive eigenvalues.And the Dirac mass matrix   in the prime basis transforms to   →    =     , where  is the complex matrix containing CP-violating Majorana phases  1 and  2 derived from   .The values of  1 and  2 are chosen arbitrarily other than /2 and 0. We then set the Wolfenstein parameter as  = 0.3 and compute the three choices of (, ) in   .In this prime basis the Dirac neutrino Yukawa coupling becomes ℎ =    /V and subsequently this value is used in the expression of CP asymmetry.The new Yukawa coupling matrix ℎ also becomes complex, and hence the term Im(ℎ † ℎ) 1 appearing in CP asymmetry parameter  1 gives a nonzero contribution.
In the second part of this paper, we construct   from  PMNS matrix with  13 value: where  PMNS is the Pontecorvo-Maki-Nakagawa-Sakata parameterised matrix taken from the standard particle data group (PDG) [50], and the corresponding mixing angles are A global analysis [51,52] current best-fit data is used in the present analysis: Neutrino oscillation data are insensitive to the low-energy individual neutrino masses.However, it can be measured in tritium beta decay [53] and neutrinoless double beta decay [54] and from the contribution of neutrinos to the energy density of the universe [55].Very recent data from the Planck experiment have set an upper bound over the sum of all the neutrino mass eigenvalues of ∑ 3 =1   ≤ 0.23eV at 95% C.L. [56].But, oscillations experiments are capable of measuring the two independent mass-squared differences Δ 2 21 =  2 2 −  2 1 and Δ 2 31 =  2 3 −  2 1 only.This two flavours oscillation approach has been quite successful in measuring the solar and atmospheric neutrino parameters.In the future the neutrino experiments must involve probing the full three flavor effects, including the subleading ones proportional to  = Δ 2  21 /|Δ 2  31 |.The Δ 2 21 is positive as is required to be positive by the observed energy dependence of the electron neutrino survival probability in solar neutrinos but Δ 2   31   is allowed to be either positive or negative by the present data.Hence, two patterns of neutrino masses are possible:  1 <  2 ≪  3 called normal hierarchy (NH) where Δ 2  31 is positive and  3 ≪  1 <  2 called inverted hierarchy (IH) where Δ 2 31 is negative.A third possibility, where the three masses are nearly quasi-degenerate with very tiny differences,  1 ≤  2 ∼  3 , between them, also exists with two subcases of Δ 2  31 being positive or negative.Leptonic CP violation (LCPV) can be established if CPviolating phase  CP is shown to differ from 0 to 180 ∘ .A detailed review on LCPV can be found in [57].It was not possible to observe a signal for CP violation in the present data so far.Thus,  CP can have any value in the range [−180 ∘ , 180 ∘ ].The Majorana phases  1 and  2 are free parameters.In the absence of constraints on the phases  1 and  2 , these have been given full variation between 0 and 2 excluding these two extreme values.

Leptogenesis
As pointed out above leptogenesis can be thermal or nonthermal; again thermal leptogenesis can be unflavoured (single flavoured) or flavoured which are all explained in the subsequent pages.In the simplest form of leptogenesis the heavy Majorana neutrinos are produced by thermal processes, which is therefore called the "thermal leptogenesis." For our estimations of CP asymmetry parameter  1 [6,58,59], we list here only the required equations for computations.However, interested reader can find more details in [60].The low-energy neutrino physics is related to the high-energy leptogenesis physics through the seesaw mechanism.In (1),    is the transpose of   and  −1  is the inverse of   .For the third generation Yukawa coupling unification, in SO (10) grand unified theory, one obtains the heavy and light neutrino masses as  3 ∼ Λ GUT ∼ 10 15 GeV and  3 ∼ V 2 / 3 ∼ 0.01 eV respectively.Remarkably, the light neutrino mass  3 is compatible with (Δ 2 atm ) 1/2 ≡  atm ≃ 0.05 eV, as measured in atmospheric neutrino oscillations.This suggests that neutrino physics probes the mass scale of grand unification (GUT), although other interpretations of neutrino masses are possible as well.The heavy Majorana neutrinos have no gauge interactions.Hence, in the early universe, they can easily be out of thermal equilibrium.This makes the lightest ( 1 ) of the heavy right-handed Majorana neutrino an ideal candidate for baryogenesis, satisfying the third condition of Sarkarov, the deviation from thermal equilibrium.Assuming hierarchical heavy neutrino masses ( 1 ≪  2 ,  3 ), the CP asymmetry generated due to CPviolating out-of-equilibrium decay of  1 is given by where   is the antilepton of lepton   and  is the Higgs doublets chiral supermultiplets.Consider where ℎ =   /V is the Yukawa coupling of the Dirac neutrino mass matrix in the diagonal basis of   and V = 174 GeV is the vev of the standard model.At high temperatures, between the critical temperature   of the electroweak phase transition and a maximal temperature  SPH , these processes are believed to be in thermal equilibrium [9].Although this important phenomenon is accepted by theorists as a correct explanation of baryogenesis via leptogenesis, it is yet to be tested experimentally.Therefore it is very fascinating that the corresponding phenomenon of chirality changing processes in strong interactions might be observed in heavy decay ion collisions at the LHC [61,62].The evolution of lepton number () and baryon number () is given by a set of coupled equations [63] by the electroweak sphaleron processes which violates ( + ) but conserves ( − ).At temperature  above the electroweak phase transition temperature   , the baryon asymmetry can be expressed in terms of ( − ) number density as [64] where ( − ) asymmetry per unit entropy is just the negative of the ratio of lepton density   and entropy (), since the baryon number is conserved in the right-handed Majorana neutrino decays.At   , any primodial ( + ) will be washed out and (10) can be written as [64,65] For standard model (SM) the number of fermion families   = 3, and the number of Higgs doublets   = 1; and (11) reduces to The ratio of baryon to photon is not conserved due to variation of photon density per comoving volume [66] at different epoch of the expanding universe.However, for very slow baryon number  nonconserving interactions, the ratio of baryon to entropy in a comoving volume is conserved.
Considering the cosmic ray microwave background temperature  ≃ 2.3 K, we have  = 7.04  .Here   is a photon number density.And finally the observed baryon asymmetry of the universe [67,68] for the case of standard model is calculated from The efficiency or dilution factor  1 describes the washout of the lepton asymmetry due to various lepton number violating processes, which mainly depends on the effective neutrino mass where V is the electroweak vev; V = 174 GeV.For 10 −2 eV < m1 < 10 −3 eV, the washout factor  1 can be well approximated by [69] We adopt a single expression for  1 valid only for the given range of m1 [69][70][71][72][73].And the comparison of the effective neutrino mass m1 with the equilibrium neutrino mass gives the information whether the system is weak or strong washout regime.For the weak washout regime we have m1 <  * and  1 ≥ 10 12 GeV whereas for the strong washout regime we have m1 >  * and  1 ≤ 10 12 GeV.However, the strong washout regime appears to be favoured by the present evidence for neutrino masses.
In the flavoured thermal leptogenesis [74][75][76][77], we look for enhancement in baryon asymmetry over the single flavour approximation and the equation for CP asymmetry in  1 →    decay where  = (, , ) becomes where   =  2  / 2  and (  ) ∼ (3/2)(1/ √   ).The efficiency factor is given by  =  * / m .Here too  * = (8V 2 / 2 1 ) ∼ 1.1 × 10 −3 eV and m = (ℎ † 1 ℎ 1 / 1 )V 2 .This leads to the BAU: For single flavour case, the second term in   vanishes when summed over all flavours.Thus this leads to baryon symmetry: where  1 = ∑    and m = ∑  m .The conditions of weak or strong washout regime for flavoured leptogenesis are the same as in the case of single favoured/unflavoured leptogenesis, however, with one difference that m1 is the effective mass due to unflavoured leptogenesis while m is the resultant effective mass due to contributions of three leptons (flavoured leptogenesis).
In nonthermal leptogenesis [78][79][80][81][82][83] the right-handed neutrinos   ( = 1, 2, 3) with masses ( 1 ,  2 ,  3 ) produced through the direct nonthermal decay of the inflaton  interact only with leptons and Higgs through Yukawa couplings.The inflaton decay rate Γ  is given by [30] where   is the mass of inflaton .The reheating temperature (  ) after inflation is [84]   = ( 44 2 2  ) and the produced baryon asymmetry of the universe can be calculated by the following relation [85]: where  = 7.0  is related to   =   / = 8.7 × 10 −11 in (23).From (23) the connection between   and   is expressed as Two boundary conditions in nonthermal leptogenesis are   > 2 1 and   ≤ 0.01 1 .The values of  1 and  for all neutrino mass models are also used in the calculation of theoretical bounds:  min  <   ≤  max  and  min  <   <  max  .Only those models which satisfy these constraints can survive in the nonthermal leptogenesis.

Numerical Analysis and Results without 𝜃 13
We first begin our numerical analysis for   without  13 given in the Appendix.The predicted parameters for tan 2  12 = 0.45, given in Table 1, are consistent with the global best-fit value.For computations of leptogenesis, we employ the well-known inversion seesaw mechanism as explained in Section 2. Finally the estimated BAU for both unflavoured  1 and flavoured  3 leptogenesis for   without  13 is tabulated in Table 2.As expected, we found that there is an enhancement in BAU in the case of flavoured leptogenesis  3 compared to unflavoured  1 .We also observe the sensitivity of BAU predictions on the choice of models without  13 and all but the five models are favourable with good predictions (see Table 2).Streaming lining further, by taking the various constraints into consideration, quasi-degenerate Type-1A, QD-1A (6, 2), and NH-III (8,4) are competing with each other, which can be tested for discrimination in the next level, the nonthermal leptogenesis.
In case of nonthermal leptogenesis, the lightest righthanded Majorana neutrino mass  1 and the CP asymmetry parameter  1 are taken from Table 2 and used in all the neutrino mass models   while computing the bounds  min  <   ≤  max  and  min  <   ≤  max  and the computed results are tabulated in Table 3.The baryon asymmetry   =   / is taken as input value from WMAP observational data.If we compare these calculations with the predictions of certain inflationary models such as chaotic or natural inflationary model which predicts the inflaton mass to be   ∼ 10 13 GeV, then from Table 3 the neutrino mass models with (, ) which are compatible with   ∼ 10 13 GeV are listed as IA-(4, 2), IIB-(4, 2), III-(4, 2), and III-(6, 2) only.The neutrino mass models with (, ) should be compatible with   ∼ (10 10 -10 13 ) GeV. Again in order to avoid gravitino problem [84] in supersymmetric models, one has the bound on reheating temperature,   ≈ (10 6 -10 7 ) Gev.This constraint further streamlines the neutrino mass models and the accepted models are IA-(4, 2), IIB-(4, 2), and III-(6, 2) only.
Furthermore, on examination of the predictions of thermal leptogenesis (Table 2) and nonthermal leptogenesis (Table 3) we found that the estimated results are inconsistent with the two mechanisms of leptogenesis in spite of the fact that they are in agreement with the observation separately.Otherwise for a good model we expect these predictions to Table 2: For zero  13 , the lightest RH Majorana neutrino mass  1 and values of CP asymmetry and baryon asymmetry for QDN models (IA, IB, and IC), IH models (IIA, IIB), and NH models (III), with tan 2  12 = 0.45, using neutrino mass matrices given in Table 4.The entry (, ) in   indicates the type of Dirac neutrino mass matrix taken as charged lepton mass matrix (6, 2) or up-quark mass matrix (8,4), or down-quark mass matrix (4, 2) as explained in the text.IA (6, 2) and III (8,4)  be consistent in both frames of leptogenesis.This implies that there is a problem with neutrino mass models without  13 .
Next we study neutrino mass models with nonzero  13 and look for consistency in the predictions of two mechanisms of leptogenesis.
Using (4), this leads to sin 2  13 = 0.0244716, tan 2  12 = 0.45495, and tan 2  23 = 1.Then the  diag of (5) are obtained from the observation data (cf.[51,52]) ) and calculated out for normal and inverted hierarchy patterns.The mass eigenvalues   ( = 1, 2, 3) can also be taken from [6,58,59].The positive and negative values of  2 correspond to Type-IA and Type-IB, respectively.Once the matrix   is determined the procedure for subsequent calculations is the same as in Section 4.
Here, we give the result of only the best model due to inclusion of reactor mixing angle  13 in predictions of baryon asymmetry, reheating temperature, and inflaton mass (  ).Undoubtedly, for tan 2  12 = 0.45, the best model is NH-IA (6, 2) with baryon asymmetry in unflavoured thermal leptogenesis  uf = 3.313 × 10 −12 , single flavoured approximation  1 = 8.844 × 10 −12 , and full flavoured  3 = 2.093 × 10 −11 .If we examine these values, we find that expectedly there is an enhancement in the predictions of baryon asymmetry parameter by a factor of 10 due to inclusion of flavour effects.Similarly in nonthermal leptogenesis, we found that NH-IA is the best model and the predicted results are Advances in High Energy Physics These results show that the neutrino mass models with  13 are consistent in all the three stages of leptogenesis estimations.And normal hierarchy of Type-IA with charged lepton matrix (6, 2) for diagonal form of Drac mass matrix is the most favoured model out of 18 models.And our calculation for all the models either with or without  13 shows that it is strong washout m1 (or m) >  * and  1 ≤ 10 12 GeV, the baryon asymmetry is generated at a temperature   (10 6 GeV) <  1 (10 9 GeV) for NH-IA model.

Conclusions
We have investigated the comparative studies of baryon asymmetry in different neutrino mass models (namely, QDN, IH, and NH) with and without  13 for tan 2  12 , and we found that models with  13 are better than models without  13 .The predictions of any models with zero  13 are haphazard in spite of the fact that their predictions are consistent in a piecemeal manner with the observational data (see Tables 2 and 3) whereas the predictions of any models with nonzero  13 are consistent throughout the calculations.And among them, only the values of NH-IA (6, 2) satisfied Davidson-Ibarra upper bound on the lightest RH neutrino CP asymmetry | 1 | ≤ 3.4 × 10 −7 and  1 lies within the famous Ibarra-Davidson bound; that is,  1 > 4 × 10 8 GeV [87].Neutrino mass models either with or without  13 , Type-IA for charged lepton matrix (6,2) in normal hierarchy appears to be the best if  CMB  = 6.1 × 10 −10 is taken as the standard reference value; on the other hand if then charged lepton matrix (5, 2) is not ruled out.We observed that unlike neutrino mass models with zero  13 , where  predominates over  and  contributions, for neutrino mass models with nonzero  13 ,  predominates over  and  contributions.This implies the factor changes for neutrino mass models with and without  13 .When flavour dynamics is included the lower bound on the reheated temperature is relaxed by a factor ∼3 to 10.We also observe enhancement effects in flavoured leptogenesis compared to nonflavoured leptogenesis by one order of magnitude.Such predictions may also help in determining the unknown Dirac Phase  in lepton sector, which we have not studied in the present paper.And our calculations show that the strong washout regime holds which is favoured by the current evidence for neutrino masses; the baryon asymmetry is generated at a temperature   (10 6 GeV) <  1 (10 9 GeV) for NH-IA model.The overall analysis shows that normal hierarchical model appears to be the most favourable choice in nature.Further enhancement from brane world cosmology [88] may marginally modify the present findings, which we have kept for future work.

Table 1 :
Predicted values of the solar and atmospheric neutrino mass-squared differences and mixing angles for tan 2  12 = 0.45.

Table 3 :
appear to be the best models.Theoretical bound on reheating temperature   and inflaton masses   in nonthermal leptogenesis, for all neutrino mass models with tan 2  12 = 0.45.Models which are consistent with observations are marked in the status column.