624 research outputs found
Inelastic photon-neutrino interactions using an effective Lagrangian
We justify the feasibility of substituting a photon leg by a neutrino current
in the Euler-Heisenberg Lagrangian to obtain an effective Lagrangian for the
process and its crossed reactions. We establish
the link between these processes and the four-photon scattering in both the
Standard Model and the effective theory. As an application, we compute the
processes and
, give their polarized cross sections, and
show how to use the results as a check. We settle
the question about the disagreement between two computations in the literature
concerning the reaction .Comment: 14 pages, RevTeX, axodraw, 3 figures, comment adde
Five-leg photon-neutrino interactions
In a first part, we justify the feasibility of substituting a photon leg by a
neutrino current in the Euler-Heisenberg Lagrangian to obtain an effective
Lagrangian for the process and its crossed
reactions.
We establish the link between these processes and the four-photon scattering
in both the Standard Model and the effective theory. As an application, we
compute in this effective theory the processes
and and show how to use the
results as a check. We settle the question of the
disagreement between two computations in the literature concerning the reaction
. In the second part, we present results of
the direct computation of the photon-neutrino five-leg processes in the
Standard Model, discuss possible astrophysical implications of our results, and
provide simple fits to the exact expressions.Comment: 6 pages, axodraw, ltwol2e, 5 figures, contributed paper to the 29th
International Conference on High Energy Physics (Vancouver
Leptogenesis with Friedberg-Lee Symmetry
We consider the symmetric Friedberg-Lee (FL) symmetry for the
neutrino sector and show that a specific FL translation leads to the
tribimaximal mixing pattern of the Maki-Nakagawa-Sakata (MNS) matrix. We also
apply the symmetry to the type-I seesaw framework and address the baryon
asymmetry of the universe through the leptogenesis mechanism. We try to
establish a relation between the net baryon asymmetry and CP phases included in
the MNS matrix.Comment: Talk given at International Workshop on Dark Matter, Dark Energy and
Matter-Antimatter Asymmetry, Hsinchu, Taiwan, 20-21 Nov. 2009, to be
published in Modern Physics Letters A, reference adde
Phenomenology of LFV at low-energies and at the LHC: strategies to probe the SUSY seesaw
We study the impact of a type-I SUSY seesaw concerning lepton flavour
violation (LFV) at low-energies and at the LHC. At the LHC, decays, in combination with other
observables, render feasible the reconstruction of the masses of the
intermediate sleptons, and hence the study of mass
differences. If interpreted as being due to the violation of lepton flavour,
high-energy observables, such as large slepton mass splittings and flavour
violating neutralino and slepton decays, are expected to be accompanied by
low-energy manifestations of LFV such as radiative and three-body lepton
decays. We discuss how to devise strategies based in the interplay of slepton
mass splittings as might be observed at the LHC and low-energy LFV observables
to derive important information on the underlying mechanism of LFV.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures. To appear in the proceedings of the 11th
International Workshop on Tau Lepton Physics (TAU2010), Manchester, UK, 13-17
September 201
Neutrinos in the simplest little Higgs scenario and TeV leptogenesis
The little Higgs scenario may provide an interesting framework to accommodate
TeV scale leptogenesis because a TeV Majorana mass of the right-handed neutrino
that we employ for the latter may find a natural place near the ultraviolet
cutoff of the former. In this work we study how a light neutrino spectrum,
generated radiatively, and TeV scale leptogenesis can be embedded in the
simplest little
Higgs framework. Alternatively, we highlight how the neutrino Yukawa textures
of the latter are constrained.Comment: 10 pages, latex, v2: refs and comments added, to appear in PR
Lepton flavour violation: physics potential of a Linear Collider
We revisit the potential of a Linear Collider concerning the study of lepton
flavour violation, in view of new LHC bounds and of the (very) recent
developments in lepton physics. Working in the framework of a type I
supersymmetric seesaw, we evaluate the prospects of observing seesaw-induced
lepton flavour violating final states of the type e \mu + missing energy,
arising from e+ e- and e- e- collisions. In both cases we address the potential
background from standard model and supersymmetric charged currents. We also
explore the possibility of electron and positron beam polarisation. The
statistical significance of the signal, even in the absence of kinematical
and/or detector cuts, renders the observation of such flavour violating events
feasible over large regions of the parameter space. We further consider the
\mu-\mu- + E^T_miss final state in the e- e- beam option finding that, due to a
very suppressed background, this process turns out to be a truly clear probe of
a supersymmetric seesaw, assuming the latter to be the unique source of lepton
flavour violation.Comment: 30 pages, 48 figure
Lattice Monte Carlo Data versus Perturbation Theory
Differences between lattice Monte Carlo data and perturbation theory (for
example the lack of asymptotic scaling) are usually associated with the `bad'
behaviour of the bare lattice coupling g_0 due to the effects of large (and
unknown) higher order terms in g_0. In this philosophy a new, renormalised
coupling g' is defined with the aim of making the higher order coefficients of
the perturbative series in g' as small as possible.
In this paper an alternative scenario is discussed where lattice artifacts
are proposed as the cause of the disagreement between Monte Carlo data and the
g_0-perturbative series. We find that with the addition of a lattice artifact
term, the usual asymptotic scaling expression in g_0 is in excellent agreement
with Monte Carlo data. Lattice data studied includes the string tension, the
hadronic scale r_0, the discrete beta function, M_rho, f_pi and the 1P-1S
splitting in charmonium.Comment: 3 pages, LaTeX. Uses espcrc2.sty and fleqn.sty (included) Talk
presented at LATTICE96(improvement
Potential of a Linear Collider for Lepton Flavour Violation studies in the SUSY seesaw
We study the potential of an e+- e- Linear Collider for charged lepton
flavour violation studies in a supersymmetric framework where neutrino masses
and mixings are explained by a type-I seesaw. Focusing on e-mu flavour
transitions, we evaluate the background from standard model and supersymmetric
charged currents to the e mu + missing E_T signal. We study the energy
dependence of both signal and background, and the effect of beam polarisation
in increasing the signal over background significance. Finally, we consider the
mu- mu- + missing E_T final state in e- e- collisions that, despite being
signal suppressed by requiring two e-mu flavour transitions, is found to be a
clear signature of charged lepton flavour violation due to a very reduced
standard model background.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures. To appear in the proceedings of "DISCRETE 2012 -
3rd Symposium on Prospects in the Physics of Discrete Symmetries", Lisbon,
Portugal, 3-7 December 201
Low-energy neutrino-photon inelastic interactions
The computation of the polarized amplitudes and cross section of the processes , and is described. We used an effective lagrangian approach for energies below the threshold for pair production and the complete computation at higher energies for application in supernova dynamics. Leading contributions of physics beyond the SM are also commented.The computation of the polarized amplitudes and cross section of the processes , and is described. We used an effective lagrangian approach for energies below the threshold for pair production and the complete computation at higher energies for application in supernova dynamics. Leading contributions of physics beyond the SM are also commented
A Two-Singlet Model for Light Cold Dark Matter
We extend the Standard Model by adding two gauge-singlet %
-symmetric scalar fields that interact with visible matter only through the
Higgs particle. One is a stable dark matter WIMP, and the other one undergoes a
spontaneous breaking of the symmetry that opens new channels for the dark
matter annihilation, hence lowering the mass of the WIMP. We study the effects
of the observed dark matter relic abundance on the annihilation cross section
and find that in most regions of the parameters space, light dark matter is
viable. We also compare the elastic scattering cross-section of our dark matter
candidate off nucleus with existing (CDMSII and XENON100) and projected
(SuperCDMS and XENON1T) experimental exclusion bounds. We find that most of the
allowed mass range for light dark matter will be probed by the projected
sensitivity of XENON1T experiment.Comment: 30 pages, 17 figure
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