81 research outputs found

    Left-Right Symmetry and Supersymmetric Unification

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    The existence of an SU(3) X SU(2)_L X SU(2)_R X U(1) gauge symmetry with g_L = g_R at the TeV energy scale is shown to be consistent with supersymmetric SO(10) grand unification at around 1O^{16} GeV if certain new particles are assumed. The additional imposition of a discrete Z_2 symmetry leads to a generalized definition of R parity as well as highly suppressed Majorana neutrino masses. Another model based on SO(10) X SO(10) is also discussed.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figures not included, UCRHEP-T124, Apr 199

    Adjoint bulk scalars and supersymmetric unification in the presence of extra dimensions

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    There are several advantages of introducing adjoint superfields at intermediate energies around M=1013M=10^{13} GeV. Such as (i) gauge couplings still unify (ii) neutrino masses and mixings are produced (iii) primordial lepton asymmetry can be produced. We point out that if adjoint scalars have bulk excitations along with gauge bosons whereas fermions and the doublet scalar live on boundary then N=2 supersymmetric beta functions bi~\tilde{b_i} vanish. Thus even if extra dimensions open up at an intermediate scale μ0\mu_0 and all N=2 Yang-Mills fields as well as N=2 matter fields in the adjoint representation propagate in the bulk, still gauge couplings renormalize beyond μ0\mu_0 just like they do in 4-dimensions with adjoint scalars. Consequently unification is achieved in the presence to extra dimensions, mass scales are determined uniquely via Renormalization Group Equations(RGE) and unification scale remains high enough to suppress proton decay. This scenario can be falsified if we get signatures of extra dimensions at low energy.Comment: New references added. This version will appear in Phys. Rev.

    SU(16) grandunification: breaking scales, proton decay and neutrino magnetic moment

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    We give a detailed renormalization group analysis for the SU(16) grandunified group with general breaking chains in which quarks and leptons transform separately at intermediate energies. Our analysis includes the effects of Higgs bosons. We show that the grandunification scale could be as low as 108.5\sim 10^{8.5} GeV and give examples where new physics could exist at relatively low energy (250\sim 250 GeV). We consider proton decay in this model and show that it is consistent with a low grandunification scale. We also discuss the possible generation of a neutrino magnetic moment in the range of 101110^{-11} to 1010μB10^{-10}\mu_B with a very small mass by the breaking of the embedded SU(2)ν_\nu symmetry at a low energy.Comment: (16 pages in REVTEX + 6 figures not included) OITS-49

    Low Energy Grand Unification With SU(16)

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    We study the possibility of achieving low unification scale in a grand unification scheme based on the gauge group SU(16). Baryon number symmetry being an explicit local gauge symmetry here gauge boson mediated proton decay is absent. We present in detail a number of symmetry breaking patterns and the higgs field representations giving rise to the desired symmetry breakings and identify one chain giving low energy unification. These higgs field representations are constructed in such a way that higgs mediated proton decay is absent. At the end we indicate the very rich low energy physics obtainable from this model which includes quark-lepton un-unified symmetry and chiral color symmetry. In brief some phenomenological implications are also studied.Comment: Phys. Rev. D48 1266, 1993. Such GUT models predict leptoquarks within TeV scale which is of current experimental interest at HER

    Particle spectrum in the modified NMSSM in the strong Yukawa coupling limit

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    A theoretical analysis of solutions of renormalisation group equations in the MSSM corresponding to the quasi-fixed point conditions shows that the mass of the lightest Higgs boson in this case does not exceed 94±5GeV94\pm 5\text{GeV}. It means that a substantial part of the parameter space of the MSSM is practically excluded by existing experimental data from LEP II. In the NMSSM the upper bound on the lightest Higgs boson mass reaches its maximum in the strong Yukawa coupling regime, when Yukawa constants are considerably larger the gauge ones on the Grand Unification scale. In this paper a particle spectrum in a simple modification of NMSSM which leads to a self-consistent solution in the considered region of the parameter space is studied. This model allows one to get mh125GeVm_h\sim 125\text{GeV} even for comparatively low values of tanβ1.9\tan\beta\ge 1.9. For an analysis of the Higgs boson spectrum and neutralino spectrum a method for diagonalisation of mass matrices proposed formerly is used. The mass of the lightest Higgs boson in this model does not exceed 130.5±3.5GeV130.5\pm 3.5\text{GeV}.Comment: 34 pages, 5 figures included, LaTeX 2

    Working Group Report: Neutrino and Astroparticle Physics

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    This is the report of neutrino and astroparticle physics working group at WHEPP-8. We present the discussions carried out during the workshop on selected topics in the above fields and also indicate progress made subsequently. The neutrino physics subgroup studied the possibilites of constraining neutrino masses, mixing and CPT violation in lepton sector from future experiments. Neutrino mass models in the context of abelian horizontal symmetries, warped extra dimensions and in presence of triplet Higgs were studied. Effect of threshold corrections on radiative magnification of mixing angles was investigated. The astroparticle physics subgroup focused on how various particle physics inputs affect the CMBR fluctuation spectrum, and on brane cosmology. This report also contains an introduction on how to use the publicly available code CMBFAST to calculate the CMBR fluctuations.Comment: Prepared for the 8th Workshop on High-Energy Physics Phenomenology (WHEPP-8), IIT Mumbai, India, 5-16 Jan 200

    Phenomenology of Minimal SU(5) Unification with Dynamical Supersymmetry Breaking

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    We consider the constraints from proton decay and bb-τ\tau unification in the minimal supersymmetric SU(5) grand unified theory with a `visible' dynamical supersymmetry breaking sector. We show how the presence of vector-like messenger fields and the constrained superparticle mass spectrum affect the phenomenology of the model. We include the messenger fields in our renormalization group analysis between the messenger scale (100\sim 100 TeV) and the GUT scale. We show that the simplest model of this type, a minimal SU(5) GUT with an additional {\bf 5}+\bfbar{5} of messenger fields is excluded by the constraints from proton decay and bb-τ\tau unification.Comment: 15 pp. LaTeX, five figures included as uuencoded, gzipped, tarred postscript file

    Intermediate Scales in SUSY SO(10), b-\tau unification and Hot Dark Matter Neutrinos

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    Considerations of massive neutrinos, baryogenesis as well as fermion mass textures in the grand unified theory framework provide strong motivations for supersymmetric(SUSY) SO(10) as the theory beyond the standard model. If one wants to simultaneously solve the strong CP problem via the Peccei-Quinn mechanism, the most natural way to implement it within the framework of the SUSY SO(10) model is to have an intermediate scale (vBLv_{BL}) (corresponding to B-L symmetry breaking) around the invisible axion scale of about 1011^{11} - 1012^{12} GeV. Such a scale is also desirable if ντ\nu_{\tau} is to constitute the hot dark matter (HDM) of the universe. In this paper, we discuss examples of superstring inspired SUSY SO(10) models with intermediate scales that are consistent with the low energy precision measurements of the standard model gauge couplings. The hypothesis of bτb-\tau unification which is a successful prediction of many grand unified theories is then required of these models and the resulting prediction of bb-quark mass is used as a measure of viability of these schemes. Detailed analysis of a model with a vBL1011v_{BL}\simeq 10^{11} GeV, which satisfies both the requirements of invisible axion and ντ\nu_{\tau} as HDM is presented and shown to lead to mb4.9m_b\simeq 4.9 GeV in the one-loop approximation.Comment: Latex file; 20 pages; Four figures available on reques

    Mass predictions based on a supersymmetric SU(5) fixed point

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    I examine the possibility that the third generation fermion masses are determined by an exact fixed point of the minimal supersymmetric SU(5) model. When one-loop supersymmetric thresholds are included, this unified fixed point successfully predicts the top quark mass, 175 +(-) 2 GeV, as well as the weak mixing angle. The bottom quark mass prediction is sensitive to the supersymmetric thresholds; it approaches the measured value for mu <0 and very large unified gaugino mass. The experimental measurement of the tau lepton mass determines tan(beta), and the strong gauge coupling and fine structure constant fix the unification scale and the unified gauge coupling.Comment: 40 pages, 9 figures, 9 tables, Revtex

    Supersymmetric Unification in the Light of Neutrino Mass

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    We argue that with the discovery of neutrino mass effects at Super-Kamiokande there is a clear logical chain leading from the Standard Model through the MSSM and the recently developed Minimal Left Right Supersymmetric models with a renormalizable see-saw mechanism for neutrino mass to Left Right symmetric SUSY GUTS : in particular, SO(10) and SU(2)L×SU(2)R×SU(4)cSU(2)_L \times SU(2)_R\times SU(4)_c. The progress in constructing such GUTS explicitly is reviewed and their testability/falsifiability by proton decay measurements emphasized.Comment: 16 pages, REVTEX. Invited talk presented at XIII DAE Symposium on High Energy Physics, Chandigarh, December 199
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