Radiative amplification of neutrino mixing angles may explain the large
values required by solar and atmospheric neutrino oscillations. Implementation
of such mechanism in the Standard Model and many of its extensions (including
the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model) to amplify the solar angle, the
atmospheric or both requires (at least two) quasi-degenerate neutrino masses,
but is not always possible. When it is, it involves a fine-tuning between
initial conditions and radiative corrections. In supersymmetric models with
neutrino masses generated through the Kahler potential, neutrino mixing angles
can easily be driven to large values at low energy as they approach infrared
pseudo-fixed points at large mixing (in stark contrast with conventional
scenarios, that have infrared pseudo-fixed points at zero mixing). In addition,
quasi-degeneracy of neutrino masses is not always required.Comment: 36 pages, 7 ps figure