1 / 41

From Cosmological Constant to Sin Distribution

From Cosmological Constant to Sin Distribution. ICRR neutrino workshop Nov. 02, 2007 Taizan Watari (U. Tokyo) 0707.344 (hep-ph) + 0707.346 (hep-ph) with L. Hall (Berkeley) and M. Salem (Tufts). Three Issues. Small but non-vanishing cosmological constant

snow
Download Presentation

From Cosmological Constant to Sin Distribution

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. From Cosmological Constantto Sin Distribution ICRR neutrino workshop Nov. 02, 2007 Taizan Watari (U. Tokyo) 0707.344 (hep-ph) + 0707.346 (hep-ph) with L. Hall (Berkeley) and M. Salem (Tufts)

  2. Three Issues • Small but non-vanishing cosmological constant • Large mixing angles in neutrino oscillation • What are “generations”? • Can we ever learn anything profound from precise measurements in the neutrino sector?

  3. Cosmological Constant Problem • Extremely difficult to explain • A possible solution by S. Weinberg ’87 • Structures (such as galaxies): formed only for moderate Cosmological Constant. • That’s where we find ourselves.

  4. Key ingredients of this solution • CC of a vacuum can take almost any value theoretically [i.e., a theory with multiple vacua] • Such multiple vacua are realized in different parts of the universe. • just like diversity + selection in biological evolution. • Any testable consequences ??

  5. What if other parameters (Yukawa)are also scanning? • Do we naturally obtain • hierarchical Yukawa eigenvalues, • generation structure in the quark sector, • but not for the lepton sector?

  6. A toy model generating statistics • In string theory compactification, • Use Gaussian wavefunctions in overlap integral: • equally-separated hierarchically small Yukawas.

  7. Generation Structure • With random Yukawa matrix elements, • In our toy model,

  8. Generation Structure • originates from localized wavefunctions of quark doublets and Higgs boson: • No flavour symmetry, yet fine. • No intrinsic difference between three quark doublets • Large mixing angles in the lepton sector • non-localized wavefunctions for lepton doublets

  9. Lepton Sector Predictions • Mixing angles without cuts • Two large angles, • After imposing cuts

  10. Summary • Multiverse, motivated by the CC problem • Scanning Yukawa couplings: statistical understanding of masses and mixings, possibly w/o a symmetry. • Generation structure: correlation between up and down-type Yukawa matrices • Localized wavefunctions of q and h are the origin of generations. • Successful distributions for the lepton sector, too, • with very large

  11. spare slides

  12. Family pairing structure correlation between the up and down Yukawa matrices • Introduce a toy landscape on an extra dimension • Quarks and Higgs boson have Gaussian wave function • Matrix elements are given by overlap integral The common wave functions of quark doublets and the Higgs boson introduce the correlation.

  13. Neutrino Physics

  14. The see-saw mechanism • Assume non-localized wavefunctions for s. • Introduce complex phases. • Calculate the Majorana mass term of RH neutrino by • Neutrino masses: hierarchy of all three matrices add up. Hence very hierarchical see-saw masses.

  15. Mixing angle distributions: • Bi-large mixing possible. • CP phase distribution

  16. The Standard Model of particle physics has 3(gauge)+22(Yukawa)+2(Higgs)+1 parameters. • What can we learn from the 20 observables in the Yukawa sector? • maybe ... not much. It does not seem that there is a beautiful and fundamental relation that governs all the Yukawa-related observables. • though they have a certain hierarchical pattern

  17. theories of flavor (very simplified) • Flavor symmetry and its small breaking • Predictive approach: use less-than 20 independent parameters to derive predictions. • Symmetry-statistics hybrid approach: • Use a symmetry to explain the hierarchical pattern. • The coefficients are just random and of order unity.

  18. ex. symmetry-statistics hybrid • an approximate U(1) symmetry broken by • U(1) charge assignment (e.g.) 0 0 3 0 2 are random coefficients of order unity.

  19. pure statistic approaches • Multiverse / landscape of vacua • best solution ever of the CC problem • supported by string theory (at least for now) • Random coefficients fit very well to this framework. • But, how can you obtain hierarchy w/o a symmetry?

  20. randomly generated matrix elements Hall Murayama Weiner ’99 Haba Murayama ‘00 • Neutrino anarchy • Generate all -related matrix elements independently, following a linear measure • explaining two large mixing angles. • Power-law landscape for the quark sector • Generate 18 matrix elements independently, following • The best fit value is Donoghue Dutta Ross ‘05

  21. Let us examine the power-law model more closely for the scale-invariant case Results: (eigenvalue distributions) Hierarchy is generated from statistics for moderately large

  22. mixing angle distributions pairing e.g. Family pairing structure is not obtained. Who determines the scale-invariant (box shaped) distribution? How can both quark and lepton sectors be accommodate within a single framework?

  23. Family pairing structure correlation between the up and down Yukawa matrices • Introduce a toy landscape on an extra dimension • Quarks and Higgs boson have Gaussian wave function • Matrix elements are given by overlap integral The common wave functions of quark doublets and the Higgs boson introduce the correlation.

  24. inspiration • in certain compactification of Het. string theory, • Yukawa couplings originate from overlap integration. • Domain wall fermion, Gaussian wavefunctions and torus fibration  see next page.

  25. domain wall fermion and torus fibration • 5D fermion in a scalar background • Gaussian wavefunction at the domain wall. • 6D on with a gauge flux F on it. • looks like a scalar bg. in 5D. • chiral fermions in eff. theory: • Generalization: -fibration on a 3-fold B.

  26. introducing “Gaussian Landscapes” (toy models) • calculate Yukawa matrix by overlap integral on a mfd B • use Gaussian wavefunctions • scan the center coordinates of Gaussian profiles • Results: try first for the easiest • Distribution of Yukawa couplings (ignoring correlations) scale invariant distribution

  27. To understand more analytically.... • FN factor distribution  Froggatt—Nielsen type mass matrices

  28. Distribution of Observables • Three Yukawa eigenvalues (the same for u and d sectors) • Three mixing angles family pairing The family pairing originates from the localized wave functions of .

  29. quick summary • hierarchy from statistics • Froggatt—Nielsen like Yukawa matrices • hence family pairing structure • FN charge assignment follows automatically. • The scale-invariant distr. follows for • Geometry dependence? • How to accommodate the lepton sector?

  30. Geometry Dependence

  31. exploit the FN approximation • FN suppression factor for q or qbar: • FN factors: the largest, middle and smallest of three randomly chosen FN factors as above.

  32. compare and • FN factors: / eigenvalues / mixing angles

  33. The original carrying info. of geometry B, is integrated once or twice in obtaining distribution fcns of observables. • details tend to be smeared out. • power/polynomial fcns of log of masses / angles in Gaussian landscapes. • broad width (weak predictability) • Dimension dependence: FN factor distribution

  34. Neutrino Physics

  35. The see-saw mechanism • Assume non-localized wavefunctions for s. • Introduce complex phases. • Calculate the Majorana mass term of RH neutrino by • Neutrino masses: hierarchy of all three matrices add up. Hence very hierarchical see-saw masses.

  36. Mixing angle distributions: • Bi-large mixing possible. • CP phase distribution

  37. In Gaussian Landscapes, • Family structure from overlap of localized wavefunctions. • FN structure with hierarchy w/o flavor sym. • Broad width distributions. • Non-localized wavefunctions for . • No FN str. in RH Majorana mass term • large hierarchy in the see-saw neutrino masses. • Large probability for observable .

  38. The scale invariant distribution of Yukawa couplings for B = S^1 becomes for B = T^2, for B = S^2.

  39. Scanning of the center coordinates should come from scanning vector-bdle moduli. • Instanton (gauge field on 4-mfd not 6-mfd) moduli space is known better. • In the t Hooft solution, the instanton-center coordinates can be chosen freely. • F-theory (or IIB) flux compactification can be used to study the scanning of complex-structure (vector bundle in Het) moduli.

More Related