The Cosmic Web and Its Filaments: Neutrino Mass from Topology and Persistent Homology
Pith reviewed 2026-05-10 17:07 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Massive neutrinos produce mass-dependent signatures in cosmic filament topology detectable at the few-percent level.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
Applying persistent homology to the cosmic density field reveals that neutrinos of different masses produce distinct patterns in the longevity of topological features within the filamentary skeleton. Filament statistics and persistence diagrams differ systematically between cosmologies with massive neutrinos and those with massless neutrinos. These differences grow with neutrino mass, appear most strongly at high redshift, and reach a few percent in amplitude for masses as small as 0.1 eV. The framework works with particle-based neutrino simulations despite their shot noise because it focuses on the salient features of the underlying field.
What carries the argument
Persistent homology on the cosmic web, which tracks the birth and death of connected components, loops, and voids across varying density thresholds to measure the persistence of filamentary structures.
If this is right
- Filaments offer an environment where neutrino effects can be isolated from other cosmic structures.
- The method provides a parameter-free way to extract multiscale neutrino signals from large-scale structure data.
- It can be applied to tracers in galaxy redshift surveys to constrain neutrino mass.
- Comparison of different neutrino implementations helps assess systematic uncertainties in the measurements.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- Topological measures might distinguish between normal and inverted neutrino mass hierarchies when combined with other cosmological probes.
- Extending the analysis to lower redshifts could test whether the high-redshift signals persist in observable galaxy distributions.
- The same tools could quantify the impact of warm dark matter or other exotic particles on web topology.
Load-bearing premise
The differences seen in persistence diagrams and filament statistics are caused by neutrino mass rather than by differences in how the simulations are run or analyzed.
What would settle it
If persistence diagrams computed from a new set of simulations with varied resolution or neutrino modeling techniques show no clear mass-dependent trend, the claim that neutrinos leave distinct topological imprints would be falsified.
Figures
read the original abstract
We apply discrete Morse theory, global topology, and persistent homology to characterize the impact of massive neutrinos on the multiscale cosmic web, focusing on filaments. The topology of the cosmic web is sensitive to neutrino imprints, and persistence diagrams provide more information than commonly used summary statistics by quantifying the longevity of topological features across densities. This scale-adaptive, parameter-free formalism is powerful, as massive neutrinos affect halos, walls, filaments, and voids in distinct ways. Within this framework, we simultaneously assess their impact on tracers and skeleton structures and capture their multiscale signals across cosmic time. Discrete Morse theory is also well suited for particle-based neutrino implementations, often affected by Poisson shot noise, as it preserves the salient features of the underlying smooth field. Using two independent sets of N-body simulations, we present filament statistics and persistence diagrams in massive-neutrino cosmologies. Our results show that neutrinos leave distinct imprints on filaments and skeleton connectivity, producing mass-dependent signatures most pronounced at high redshift (z~2) and detectable at the few-percent level for masses as small as $M_\nu \sim 0.1$ eV. Filaments thus provide an ideal environment for isolating neutrino effects. We also compare two implementations of massive neutrinos to assess systematics. Our study establishes a promising avenue for leveraging cosmic web topology, persistent homology, and environment-based statistics to constrain or directly detect neutrino mass and infer the mass hierarchy - a long-standing challenge in particle physics and a major objective of ongoing and upcoming galaxy redshift surveys (e.g., DES, DESI, Euclid, Rubin-LSST).
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript applies discrete Morse theory, global topology, and persistent homology to N-body simulations to study the effects of massive neutrinos on the cosmic web, with emphasis on filaments and skeleton connectivity. Using two independent simulation suites and comparing two neutrino implementations, it reports mass-dependent imprints in filament statistics and persistence diagrams that are strongest at z~2 and detectable at the few-percent level down to M_ν ~ 0.1 eV, positioning filaments as an environment for isolating neutrino effects and potentially constraining the mass hierarchy.
Significance. If the central results hold after addressing systematics, the work offers a promising topology-based probe complementary to power-spectrum or halo-mass-function methods, exploiting the distinct neutrino impacts across web elements and the parameter-free nature of persistent homology. The use of two independent simulation sets and explicit implementation comparisons is a positive step toward robustness, and the suitability of discrete Morse theory for mitigating Poisson noise in particle-based neutrinos is a clear strength.
major comments (3)
- [Abstract and §4] Abstract and §4 (Results): the claim of 'detectable at the few-percent level' for M_ν ~ 0.1 eV is presented without reported error bars, simulation variance estimates, bootstrap uncertainties, or explicit null tests (e.g., randomized realizations or controlled massless runs). This absence prevents verification that the reported mass-dependent differences in persistence diagrams and filament statistics exceed numerical or cosmic variance.
- [§4.2] §4.2 (neutrino implementation comparison): although two implementations are contrasted to assess systematics, the text does not quantify the inter-implementation scatter in persistence diagrams or filament/skeleton statistics relative to the 0.1 eV vs. massless contrast across density thresholds and redshifts. If this scatter is comparable to or larger than the claimed signal, the attribution of differences solely to neutrino mass cannot be established.
- [§3 and §4] §3 (Simulations) and §4: no resolution or volume convergence tests are shown for the topological measures at the scales and redshifts (particularly z~2) where the few-percent signals are reported. Given the sensitivity of persistent homology to small-scale noise, this leaves open whether the observed mass dependence could be contaminated by resolution or shot-noise residuals.
minor comments (2)
- [Abstract and §2] The abstract refers to a 'parameter-free formalism,' yet persistent homology involves choices in filtration and density estimation; a brief clarification in §2 would avoid potential confusion.
- [§4] Figure captions in §4 could explicitly state the number of realizations used and whether error bands (if any) represent standard deviation or standard error.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for their thorough review and valuable feedback on our manuscript. We appreciate the recognition of the potential of our topological approach and the positive comments on the use of two simulation suites and implementation comparisons. Below, we address each major comment point by point, providing clarifications and outlining the revisions we will make to strengthen the manuscript.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Abstract and §4] Abstract and §4 (Results): the claim of 'detectable at the few-percent level' for M_ν ~ 0.1 eV is presented without reported error bars, simulation variance estimates, bootstrap uncertainties, or explicit null tests (e.g., randomized realizations or controlled massless runs). This absence prevents verification that the reported mass-dependent differences in persistence diagrams and filament statistics exceed numerical or cosmic variance.
Authors: We agree that providing quantitative error estimates is essential for substantiating the significance of our results. In the original manuscript, the 'few-percent level' refers to the relative differences observed consistently across the two independent simulation suites and between massive and massless neutrino cases. However, to address this concern, we will add bootstrap resampling uncertainties on the persistence diagrams and filament statistics, include comparisons with randomized realizations, and explicitly show the differences relative to the massless case with error bars in the revised §4. This will allow readers to verify that the mass-dependent signals exceed the estimated variances. revision: yes
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Referee: [§4.2] §4.2 (neutrino implementation comparison): although two implementations are contrasted to assess systematics, the text does not quantify the inter-implementation scatter in persistence diagrams or filament/skeleton statistics relative to the 0.1 eV vs. massless contrast across density thresholds and redshifts. If this scatter is comparable to or larger than the claimed signal, the attribution of differences solely to neutrino mass cannot be established.
Authors: We thank the referee for highlighting this important point on systematics. In the revised manuscript, we will include a quantitative comparison of the inter-implementation scatter (between the two neutrino implementations) versus the neutrino mass signal (0.1 eV vs. massless) for the key statistics at various redshifts and density thresholds. We will add panels or tables showing the ratio of scatter to signal, demonstrating that the implementation differences are smaller than the mass-dependent effects, thereby supporting the attribution to neutrino mass. revision: yes
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Referee: [§3 and §4] §3 (Simulations) and §4: no resolution or volume convergence tests are shown for the topological measures at the scales and redshifts (particularly z~2) where the few-percent signals are reported. Given the sensitivity of persistent homology to small-scale noise, this leaves open whether the observed mass dependence could be contaminated by resolution or shot-noise residuals.
Authors: We acknowledge that convergence tests are crucial given the sensitivity of persistent homology to small-scale features. Although our use of two independent simulation sets with different resolutions and volumes provides some indication of robustness, we did not explicitly present dedicated convergence tests in the original submission. In the revision, we will add resolution and volume convergence tests for the persistence diagrams and filament statistics at z~2, including comparisons at different particle numbers and box sizes to confirm that the reported mass-dependent signals are not affected by numerical artifacts or shot noise. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No circularity: direct simulation comparison with cross-checks
full rationale
The paper performs a comparative analysis of N-body simulation outputs (two independent sets, two neutrino implementations) using persistent homology and discrete Morse theory on the cosmic web. No parameter is fitted to a subset of data and then relabeled as a prediction; no derivation chain reduces by construction to its inputs; no self-citation is invoked as a uniqueness theorem or load-bearing premise for the central claim. The mass-dependent signals are extracted directly from the topology of the simulated fields, with explicit systematics checks noted in the abstract. This is a standard, self-contained empirical study whose conclusions rest on the simulation data rather than on any tautological re-expression of its own assumptions.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- domain assumption N-body simulations with the chosen neutrino implementations accurately reproduce the true impact of massive neutrinos on structure formation
Reference graph
Works this paper leans on
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discussion (0)
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