In Split Supersymmetry scenarios the possibility of having a very heavy
gravitino opens the door to alleviate or completely solve the worrisome
"gravitino problem'' in the context of supersymmetric baryogenesis models. Here
we assume that the gravitino may indeed be heavy and that Majorana masses for
neutrinos are forbidden as well as direct Higgs Yukawa couplings between left
and right handed neutrinos. We investigate the viability of the mechansim known
as Dirac leptogenesis (or neutrinogenesis), both in solving the baryogenesis
puzzle and explaining the observed neutrino sector phenomenology. To
successfully address these issues, the scenario requires the introduction of at
least two new heavy fields. If a hierarchy among these new fields is
introduced, and some reasonable stipulations are made on the couplings that
appear in the superpotential, it becomes a generic feature to obtain the
observed large lepton mixing angles. We show that in this case, it is possible
simultaneously to obtain both the correct neutrino phenomenology and enough
baryon number, making thermal Dirac neutrinogenesis viable. However, due to
cosmological constraints, its ability to satisfy these constraints depends
nontrivially on model parameters of the overall theory, particularly the
gravitino mass. Split supersymmetry with m_{3/2} between 10^{5} and 10^{10} GeV
emerges as a "natural habitat" for thermal Dirac neutrinogenesis.Comment: 37 pages, 8 figure