1,285 research outputs found
Updates to the Dualized Standard Model on Fermion Masses and Mixings
The Dualized Standard Model has scored a number of successes in explaining
the fermion mass hierarchy and mixing pattern. This note contains updates to
those results including (a) an improved treatment of neutrino oscillation free
from previous assumptions on neutrino masses, and hence admitting now the
preferred LMA solution to solar neutrinos, (b) an understanding of the
limitation of the 1-loop calculation so far performed, thus explaining the two
previous discrepancies with data, and (c) an analytic derivation and
confirmation of the numerical results previously obtained.Comment: 15 pages, Latex, 1 figure using ep
The Rotating Mass Matrix, the Strong CP Problem and Higgs Decay
We investigate a recent solution to the strong CP problem, obtaining a
theta-angle of order unity, and show that a smooth trajectory of the massive
eigenvector of a rank-one rotating mass matrix is consistent with the
experimental data for both fermion masses and mixing angles (except for the
masses of the lightest quarks). Using this trajectory we study Higgs decay and
find suppression of compared to the standard model
predictions for a range of Higgs masses. We also give limits for flavour
violating decays, including a relatively large branching ratio for the
mode.Comment: 15 pages, 6 figures; improvements to introduction and preliminarie
B and B_s decay constants from QCD Duality at three loops
Using special linear combinations of finite energy sum rules which minimize
the contribution of the unknown continuum spectral function, we compute the
decay constants of the pseudoscalar mesons B and B_s. In the computation, we
employ the recent three loop calculation of the pseudoscalar two-point function
expanded in powers of the running bottom quark mass. The sum rules show
remarkable stability over a wide range of the upper limit of the finite energy
integration. We obtain the following results for the pseudoscalar decay
constants: f_B=178 \pm 14 MeV and f_{B_s}=200 \pm 14 MeV. The results are
somewhat lower than recent predictions based on Borel transform, lattice
computations or HQET. Our sum rule approach of exploiting QCD quark hadron
duality differs significantly from the usual ones, and we believe that the
errors due to theoretical uncertainties are smaller
A Model Behind the Standard Model
In spite of its many successes, the Standard Model makes many empirical
assumptions in the Higgs and fermion sectors for which a deeper theoretical
basis is sought. Starting from the usual gauge symmetry plus the 3 assumptions: (A) scalar fields as vielbeins in
internal symmetry space \cite{framevec}, (B) the ``confinement picture'' of
symmetry breaking \cite{tHooft,Banovici}, (C) generations as ``dual'' to colour
\cite{genmixdsm}, we are led to a scheme which offers: (I) a geometrical
significance to scalar fields, (II) a theoretical criterion on what scalar
fields are to be introduced, (III) a partial explanation of why appears
broken while confines, (IV) baryon-lepton number (B - L) conservation,
(V) the standard electroweak structure, (VI) a 3-valued generation index for
leptons and quarks, and (VII) a dynamical system with all the essential
features of an earlier phenomenological model \cite{genmixdsm} which gave a
good description of the known mass and mixing patterns of quarks and leptons
including neutrino oscillations. There are other implications the consistency
of which with experiment, however, has not yet been systematically explored. A
possible outcome is a whole new branch of particle spectroscopy from
confinement, potentially as rich in details as that of hadrons from colour
confinement, which will be accessible to experiment at high energy.Comment: 66 pages, added new material on phenomenology, and some new
reference
On the Corner Elements of the CKM and PMNS Matrices
Recent experiments show that the top-right corner element () of the
PMNS, like that () of the CKM, matrix is small but nonzero, and suggest
further via unitarity that it is smaller than the bottom-left corner element
(), again as in the CKM case (). An attempt in
explaining these facts would seem an excellent test for any model of the mixing
phenomenon. Here, it is shown that if to the assumption of a universal rank-one
mass matrix, long favoured by phenomenologists, one adds that this matrix
rotates with scale, then it follows that (A) by inputting the mass ratios
, and , (i) the corner elements are
small but nonzero, (ii) , , (iii)
estimates result for the ratios and , and
(B) by inputting further the experimental values of and
, (iv) estimates result for the values of the corner elements
themselves. All the inequalities and estimates obtained are consistent with
present data to within expectation for the approximations made.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figures, updated with new experimental data and more
detail
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