1,000 research outputs found
Relating leptogenesis parameters to light neutrino masses
We obtain model independent relations among neutrino masses and leptogenesis
parameters. We find exact relations that involve the CP asymmetries
, the washout parameters and
, and the neutrino masses and , as well
as powerful inequalities that involve just and . We
prove that the Yukawa interactions of at least two of the heavy singlet
neutrinos are in the strong washout region ().Comment: 5 pages, 1 figur
Generation of continuous-wave THz radiation by use of quantum interference
We propose a scheme for generation of continuous-wave THz radiation. The
scheme requires a medium where three discrete states in a
configuration can be selected, with the THz-frequency transition between the
two lower metastable states. We consider the propagation of three-frequency
continuous-wave electromagnetic (e.m.) radiation through a medium.
Under resonant excitation, the medium absorption can be strongly reduced due to
quantum interference of transitions, while the nonlinear susceptibility is
enhanced. This leads to very efficient energy transfer between the e.m. waves
providing a possibility for THz generation. We demonstrate that the photon
conversion efficiency is approaching unity in this technique.Comment: 18 pages, 4 figure
Anthropic solution to the magnetic muon anomaly: the charged see-saw
We present models of new physics that can explain the muon g-2 anomaly in
accord with with the assumption that the only scalar existing at the weak scale
is the Higgs, as suggested by anthropic selection. Such models are dubbed
"charged see-saw" because the muon mass term is mediated by heavy leptons. The
electroweak contribution to the g-2 gets modified by order one factors, giving
an anomaly of the same order as the observed hint, which is strongly correlated
with a modification of the Higgs coupling to the muon.Comment: 21 pages, many equations despite the first word in the title. v3:
loop function G_WN corrected, conclusions unchange
Supersymmetric Leptogenesis
We study leptogenesis in the supersymmetric standard model plus the seesaw.
We identify important qualitative differences that characterize supersymmetric
leptogenesis with respect to the non-supersymmetric case. The lepton number
asymmetries in fermions and scalars do not equilibrate, and are related via a
non-vanishing gaugino chemical potential. Due to the presence of new anomalous
symmetries, electroweak sphalerons couple to winos and higgsinos, and QCD
sphalerons couple to gluinos, thus modifying the corresponding chemical
equilibrium conditions. A new constraint on particles chemical potentials
corresponding to an exactly conserved -charge, that also involves the number
density asymmetry of the heavy sneutrinos, appears. These new ingredients
determine the matrices that mix up the density asymmetries of the
lepton flavours and of the heavy sneutrinos. We explain why in all temperature
ranges the particle thermodynamic system is characterized by the same number of
independent quantities. Numerical differences with respect to usual treatment
remain at the level.Comment: 30 pages, 2 figures. Typos corrected, one reference added. Version
published in JCA
Neutrino Masses and Lepton-flavor-violating Decays in the Supersymmetric Left-right Model
In the supersymmetric left-right model, the light neutrino masses are given
by the Type-II seesaw mechanism. A duality property about this mechanism
indicates that there exist eight possible Higgs triplet Yukawa couplings which
result in the same neutrino mass matrix. In this paper, We work out the
one-loop renormalization group equations for the effective neutrino mass matrix
in the supersymmetric left-right model. The stability of the Type-II seesaw
scenario is briefly discussed. We also study the lepton-flavor-violating
processes ( and ) by using the
reconstructed Higgs triplet Yukawa couplings
CP violation in scatterings, three body processes and the Boltzmann equations for leptogenesis
We obtain the Boltzmann equations for leptogenesis including decay and
scattering processes with two and three body initial or final states. We
present an explicit computation of the CP violating scattering asymmetries. We
analyze their possible impact in leptogenesis, and we discuss the validity of
their approximate expressions in terms of the decay asymmetry. In scenarios in
which the initial heavy neutrino density vanishes, the inclusion of CP
asymmetries in scatterings can enforce a cancellation between the lepton
asymmetry generated at early times and the asymmetry produced at later times.
We argue that a sizeable amount of washout is crucial for spoiling this
cancellation, and we show that in the regimes in which the washouts are
particularly weak, the inclusion of CP violation in scatterings yields a
reduction in the final value of the lepton asymmetry. In the strong washout
regimes the inclusion of CP violation in scatterings still leads to a
significant enhancement of the lepton asymmetry at high temperatures; however,
due to the independence from the early conditions that is characteristic of
these regimes, the final value of the lepton asymmetry remains approximately
unchanged.Comment: 24 pages, 6 figures. One appendix added. Some numerical results and
corresponding figures (mainly fig. 3) corrected. Final version to be
published in JHE
Wash-Out in N_2-dominated leptogenesis
We study the wash-out of a cosmological baryon asymmetry produced via
leptogenesis by subsequent interactions. Therefore we focus on a scenario in
which a lepton asymmetry is established in the out-of-equilibrium decays of the
next-to-lightest right-handed neutrino. We apply the full classical Boltzmann
equations without the assumption of kinetic equilibrium and including all
quantum statistical factors to calculate the wash-out of the lepton asymmetry
by interactions of the lightest right-handed state. We include scattering
processes with top quarks in our analysis. This is of particular interest since
the wash-out is enhanced by scatterings and the use of mode equations with
quantum statistical distribution functions. In this way we provide a
restriction on the parameter space for this scenarios.Comment: 26 pages, 4 figures, profound revision, exposition is now in flavor
notation, one plot and discussion added, numerical error corrected, three
plots changed, text polished, main results remain unchanged, reference
added,matches published versio
Standard Model tests with trapped radioactive atoms
We review the use of laser cooling and trapping for Standard Model tests,
focusing on trapping of radioactive isotopes. Experiments with neutral atoms
trapped with modern laser cooling techniques are testing several basic
predictions of electroweak unification. For nuclear decay, demonstrated
trap techniques include neutrino momentum measurements from beta-recoil
coincidences, along with methods to produce highly polarized samples. These
techniques have set the best general constraints on non-Standard Model scalar
interactions in the first generation of particles. They also have the promise
to test whether parity symmetry is maximally violated, to search for tensor
interactions, and to search for new sources of time reversal violation. There
are also possibilites for exotic particle searches. Measurements of the
strength of the weak neutral current can be assisted by precision atomic
experiments using traps of small numbers of radioactive atoms, and sensitivity
to possible time-reversal violating electric dipole moments can be improved.Comment: 45 pages, 17 figures, v3 includes clarifying referee comments,
especially in beta decay section, and updated figure
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