31 research outputs found
Heavy and light scalar leptoquarks in proton decay
We list scalar leptoquarks that mediate proton decay via renormalizable
couplings to the Standard Model fermions. We employ a general basis of baryon
number violating operators to parameterize contributions of each leptoquark
towards proton decay. This then sets the stage for investigation of bounds on
the leptoquark couplings to fermions with respect to the most current Super
Kamiokande results on proton stability. We quantify if, and when, it is
necessary to have leptoquark masses close to a scale of grand unification in
the realistic SU(5) and flipped SU(5) frameworks. The most and the least
conservative lower bounds on the leptoquark masses are then presented. We
furthermore single out a leptoquark without phenomenologically dangerous
tree-level exchanges that might explain discrepancy of the forward-backward
asymmetries in production observed at Tevatron, if relatively light.
The same state could also play significant role in explaining muon anomalous
magnetic moment. We identify contributions of this leptoquark to dimension-six
operators, mediated through a box diagram, and tree-level dimension-nine
operators, that would destabilize proton if sizable leptoquark and diquark
couplings were to be simultaneously present.Comment: 26 pp, 2 figures, extensive expansion of Section V with new result
Minimal SO(10) splits supersymmetry
A good fit of the fermion masses and mixings has been found in the minimal
renormalizable supersymmetric SO(10). This solution needs a strongly split
supersymmetry breaking scenario with gauginos and higgsinos around 100 TeV,
sfermions close to 10^14 GeV and a low GUT scale of around 6 10^15 GeV. We
predict fast proton decays through SO(10) type of d=6 operators and the
leptonic mixing angle theta_13 approximately 0.1.Comment: 26 pages, 3 figure
New Physics Models Facing Lepton Flavor Violating Higgs Decays at the Percent Level
We speculate about the possible interpretations of the recently observed
excess in the decay. We derive a robust lower bound on the
Higgs boson coupling strength to a tau and a muon, even in presence of the most
general new physics affecting other Higgs properties. Then we reevaluate
complementary indirect constraints coming from low energy observables as well
as from theoretical considerations. In particular, the tentative signal should
lead to at rates which could be observed at Belle II. In
turn we show that, barring fine-tuned cancellations, the effect can only be
accommodated within models with an extended scalar sector. These general
conclusions are demonstrated using a number of explicit new physics models.
Finally we show how, given the signal, the current and future
searches for and nuclear conversions
unambiguously constrain the allowed rates for .Comment: 34 pages, 9 figures, expanded Section V.D with the fine-tuning
solution; conclusions unchange
Fermion Masses and the UV Cutoff of the Minimal Realistic Su (5) model
We investigate the predictions for fermion masses in the minimal realistic non-supersymmetric SU(5) model with the Standard Model matter content. The possibility to achieve b-\tau unification is studied taking into account all relevant effects. In addition, we show how to establish an upper bound on the ultraviolet cutoff \Lambda of the theory which is compatible with the Yukawa couplings at the grand unified scale and proton decay. We find \Lambda \simeq 10^{17} GeV, to be considered a conservative upper bound on the cutoff. We also provide up-to-date values of all the fermions masses at the electroweak scale