947 research outputs found
Calculable inverse-seesaw neutrino masses in supersymmetry
We provide a scenario where naturally small and calculable neutrino masses
arise from a supersymmetry breaking renormalization-group-induced vacuum
expectation value. We adopt a minimal supergravity scenario without ad hoc
supersymmetric mass parameters. The lightest supersymmetric particle can be an
isosinglet scalar neutrino state, potentially viable as WIMP dark matter
through its Higgs new boson coupling. The scenario leads to a plethora of new
phenomenological implications at accelerators including the Large Hadron
Collider.Comment: LaTeX, 5 pages, 4 figures. Comments and references added. Final
version to appear in PR
A Supersymmetric D4 Model for mu-tau Symmetry
We construct a supersymmeterized version of the model presented by Grimus and
Lavoura (GL) in [1] which predicts theta_{23} maximal and theta_{13}=0 in the
lepton sector. For this purpose, we extend the flavor group, which is D4 x
Z2^{(aux)} in the original model, to D4 x Z5. An additional difference is the
absence of right-handed neutrinos. Despite these changes the model is the same
as the GL model, since theta_{23} maximal and theta_{13}=0 arise through the
same mismatch of D4 subgroups, D2 in the charged lepton and Z2 in the neutrino
sector. In our setup D4 is solely broken by gauge singlets, the flavons. We
show that their vacuum structure, which leads to the prediction of theta_{13}
and theta_{23}, is a natural result of the scalar potential. We find that the
neutrino mass matrix only allows for inverted hierarchy, if we assume a certain
form of spontaneous CP violation. The quantity |m_{ee}|, measured in
neutrinoless double beta decay, is nearly equal to the lightest neutrino mass
m3. The Majorana phases phi1 and phi2 are restricted to a certain range for m3
< 0.06 eV. We discuss the next-to-leading order corrections which give rise to
shifts in the vacuum expectation values of the flavons. These induce deviations
from maximal atmospheric mixing and vanishing theta_{13}. It turns out that
these deviations are smaller for theta_{23} than for theta_{13}.Comment: 19 pages, 4 figure
A heavy Higgs boson from flavor and electroweak symmetry breaking unification
We present a unified picture of flavor and electroweak symmetry breaking
based on a nonlinear sigma model spontaneously broken at the TeV scale. Flavor
and Higgs bosons arise as pseudo-Goldstone modes. Explicit collective symmetry
breaking yields stable vacuum expectation values and masses protected at one
loop by the little-Higgs mechanism. The coupling to the fermions generates
well-definite mass textures--according to a U(1) global flavor symmetry--that
correctly reproduce the mass hierarchies and mixings of quarks and leptons. The
model is more constrained than usual little-Higgs models because of bounds on
weak and flavor physics. The main experimental signatures testable at the LHC
are a rather large mass m_{h^0} = 317\pm 80 GeV for the (lightest) Higgs boson
and a characteristic spectrum of new bosons and fermions at the TeV scale.Comment: 5 page
Minimal supergravity sneutrino dark matter and inverse seesaw neutrino masses
We show that within the inverse seesaw mechanism for generating neutrino
masses minimal supergravity is more likely to have a sneutrino as the lightest
superparticle than the conventional neutralino. We also demonstrate that such
schemes naturally reconcile the small neutrino masses with the correct relic
sneutrino dark matter abundance and accessible direct detection rates in
nuclear recoil experiments.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Genetic variability of Haemonchus contortus (Nematoda: Trichostrongyloidea) in alpine ruminant host species
Genetic variability of the ovine parasite Haemonchus contortus from the Alpine area was investigated using mitochondrial DNA (nd4 gene), internal transcribed spacers 1 and 2 and microsatellites, in order to assess whether cross-transmission between domestic and wild ruminants occurs. The dataset was composed of 78 individual adult male H. contortus collected from chamois (Rupicapra r. rupicapra), roe deer (Capreolus capreolus), alpine ibex (Capra ibex ibex), domestic goat (Capra hircus) and sheep (Ovis aries) from different alpine areas. The data obtained show low host specificity and high genetic variation within H. contortus populations. The analyses indicate the presence of two mitochondrial haplotype clusters among host species and the absence of cryptic parasite species, confirming H. contortus as a generalist nematode and suggesting that parasite transmission between populations of domestic and wild ruminants normally occurs
Strong coupling, discrete symmetry and flavour
We show how two principles - strong coupling and discrete symmetry - can work
together to generate the flavour structure of the Standard Model. We propose
that in the UV the full theory has a discrete flavour symmetry, typically only
associated with tribimaximal mixing in the neutrino sector. Hierarchies in the
particle masses and mixing matrices then emerge from multiple strongly coupled
sectors that break this symmetry. This allows for a realistic flavour
structure, even in models built around an underlying grand unified theory. We
use two different techniques to understand the strongly coupled physics:
confinement in N=1 supersymmetry and the AdS/CFT correspondence. Both
approaches yield equivalent results and can be represented in a clear,
graphical way where the flavour symmetry is realised geometrically.Comment: 31 pages, 5 figures, updated references and figure
A Simplest A4 Model for Tri-Bimaximal Neutrino Mixing
We present a see-saw model for Tri-Bimaximal mixing which is based on a
very economical flavour symmetry and field content and still possesses all the
good features of models. In particular the charged lepton mass
hierarchies are determined by the flavour symmetry itself
without invoking a Froggatt-Nielsen U(1) symmetry. Tri-Bimaximal mixing is
exact in leading order while all the mixing angles receive corrections of the
same order in next-to-the-leading approximation. As a consequence the predicted
value of is within the sensitivity of the experiments which will
take data in the near future. The light neutrino spectrum, typical of
see-saw models, with its phenomenological implications, also including
leptoproduction, is studied in detail.Comment: 20 pages, 2 figure
Non-Abelian Discrete Flavor Symmetries from T^2/Z_N Orbifolds
In [1] it was shown how the flavor symmetry A4 (or S4) can arise if the three
fermion generations are taken to live on the fixed points of a specific
2-dimensional orbifold. The flavor symmetry is a remnant of the 6-dimensional
Poincare symmetry, after it is broken down to the 4-dimensional Poincare
symmetry through compactification via orbifolding. This raises the question if
there are further non-abelian discrete symmetries that can arise in a similar
setup. To this end, we generalize the discussion by considering all possible
2-dimensional orbifolds and the flavor symmetries that arise from them. The
symmetries we obtain from these orbifolds are, in addition to S4 and A4, the
groups D3, D4 and D6 \simeq D3 x Z2 which are all popular groups for flavored
model building.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figure
Vacuum Alignment in SUSY A4 Models
In this note we discuss the vacuum alignment in supersymmetric models with
spontaneously broken flavour symmetries in the presence of soft supersymmetry
(SUSY) breaking terms. We show that the inclusion of soft SUSY breaking terms
can give rise to non-vanishing vacuum expectation values (VEVs) for the
auxiliary components of the flavon fields. These non-zero VEVs can have an
important impact on the phenomenology of this class of models, since they can
induce an additional flavour violating contribution to the sfermion soft mass
matrix of right-left (RL) type. We carry out an explicit computation in a class
of SUSY A4 models predicting tri-bimaximal mixing in the lepton sector. The
flavour symmetry breaking sector is described in terms of flavon and driving
supermultiplets. We find non-vanishing VEVs for the auxiliary components of the
flavon fields and for the scalar components of the driving fields which are of
order m_{SUSY} x and m_{SUSY}, respectively. Thereby, m_{SUSY} is the
generic soft SUSY breaking scale which is expected to be around 1 TeV and
is the VEV of scalar components of the flavon fields. Another effect of these
VEVs can be the generation of a mu term.Comment: 23 pages; added a new section on the relation to Supergravity;
version accepted for publication in JHE
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