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R-parity

R-parity is a concept in particle physics. In the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model, baryon number and lepton number are no longer conserved by all of the renormalizable couplings in the theory. Since baryon number and lepton number conservation have been tested very precisely, these couplings need to be very small in order not to be in conflict with experimental data. R-parity is a symmetry acting on the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model (MSSM) fields that forbids these couplings and can be defined as[1]

or, equivalently, as

where s is spin, B is baryon number, and L is lepton number. All Standard Model particles have R-parity of +1 while supersymmetric particles have R-parity of −1.

Note that there are different forms of parity with different effects and principles, one should not confuse this parity with any other parity.

Dark matter candidate edit

With R-parity being preserved, the lightest supersymmetric particle (LSP) cannot decay. This lightest particle (if it exists) may therefore account for the observed missing mass of the universe that is generally called dark matter.[2] In order to fit observations, it is assumed that this particle has a mass of 100 GeV/c2 to TeV/c2, is neutral and only interacts through weak interactions and gravitational interactions. It is often called a weakly interacting massive particle or WIMP.

Typically the dark matter candidate of the MSSM is a mixture of the electroweak gauginos and Higgsinos and is called a neutralino. In extensions to the MSSM it is possible to have a sneutrino be the dark matter candidate. Another possibility is the gravitino, which only interacts via gravitational interactions and does not require strict R-parity.

R-parity violating couplings of the MSSM edit

The renormalizable R-parity violating couplings of the MSSM are

  •   violates B by 1 unit

The strongest constraint involving this coupling alone is from the non-observation of neutron–antineutron oscillations.

  •   violates L by 1 unit

The strongest constraint involving this coupling alone is the violation universality of Fermi constant   in quark and leptonic charged current decays.

  •   violates L by 1 unit

The strongest constraint involving this coupling alone is the violation universality of Fermi constant in leptonic charged current decays.

  •   violates L by 1 unit

The strongest constraint involving this coupling alone is that it leads to a large neutrino mass.

While the constraints on single couplings are reasonably strong, if multiple couplings are combined together, they lead to proton decay. Thus there are further maximal bounds on values of the couplings from maximal bounds on proton decay rate.

Proton decay edit

 

Without baryon and lepton number being conserved and taking   couplings for the R-parity violating couplings, the proton can decay in approximately 10−2 seconds or if minimal flavor violation is assumed the proton lifetime can be extended to 1 year. Since the proton lifetime is observed to be greater than 1033 to 1034 years (depending on the exact decay channel), this would highly disfavour the model. R-parity sets all of the renormalizable baryon and lepton number violating couplings to zero and the proton is stable at the renormalizable level and the lifetime of the proton is increased to 1032 years and is nearly consistent with current observational data.

Because proton decay involves violating both lepton and baryon number simultaneously, no single renormalizable R-parity violating coupling leads to proton decay. This has motivated the study of R-parity violation where only one set of the R-parity violating couplings are non-zero which is sometimes called the single coupling dominance hypothesis.

Possible origins of R-parity edit

A very attractive way to motivate R-parity is with a B − L continuous gauge symmetry which is spontaneously broken at a scale inaccessible to current experiments. A continuous   forbids renormalizable terms which violate B and L.[3][4][5][6] If   is only broken by scalar vacuum expectation values (or other order parameters) that carry even integer values of 3(B − L), then there exist an exactly conserved discrete remnant subgroup which has the desired properties.[7][8][9][10][11] The crucial issue is to determine whether the sneutrino (the supersymmetric partner of neutrino), which is odd under R-parity, develops a vacuum expectation value. It can be shown, on phenomenological grounds, that this cannot happen in any theory where   is broken at a scale much above the electroweak one. This is true in any theory based on a large-scale seesaw mechanism.[12] As a consequence, in such theories R-parity remains exact at all energies.

This phenomenon can arise as an automatic symmetry in SO(10) grand unified theories. This natural occurrence of R-parity is possible because in SO(10) the Standard Model fermions arise from the 16 dimensional spinor representation, while the Higgs arises from a 10 dimensional vector representation. In order to make an SO(10) invariant coupling, one must have an even number of spinor fields (i.e. there is a spinor parity). After GUT symmetry breaking, this spinor parity descends into R-parity so long as no spinor fields were used to break the GUT symmetry. Explicit examples of such SO(10) theories have been constructed.[13][14]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Martin, S. P. (6 Sep 2011). "A Supersymmetry Primer". Advanced Series on Directions in High Energy Physics. 18: 1–98. arXiv:hep-ph/9709356. doi:10.1142/9789812839657_0001. ISBN 978-981-02-3553-6. S2CID 118973381.
  2. ^ Jungman, G.; Kamionkowski, M.; Griest, K. (1996). "Supersymmetric dark matter". Physics Reports. 267 (5–6): 195–373. arXiv:hep-ph/9506380. Bibcode:1996PhR...267..195J. doi:10.1016/0370-1573(95)00058-5. S2CID 119067698.
  3. ^ Mohapatra, R.N. (1986). "New contributions to neutrinoless double-beta decay in supersymmetric theories". Physical Review D. 34 (11): 3457–3461. Bibcode:1986PhRvD..34.3457M. doi:10.1103/PhysRevD.34.3457. PMID 9957083.
  4. ^ Font, A.; Ibáñez, L.E.; Quevedo, F. (1989). "Does proton stability imply the existence of an extra Z0?" (PDF). Physics Letters B. 228 (1): 79–88. Bibcode:1989PhLB..228...79F. doi:10.1016/0370-2693(89)90529-7.
  5. ^ Martin, S.P. (1992). "Some simple criteria for gauged R parity". Physical Review D. 46 (7): R2769–R2772. arXiv:hep-ph/9207218. Bibcode:1992PhRvD..46.2769M. doi:10.1103/PhysRevD.46.R2769. PMID 10015267. S2CID 14821065.
  6. ^ Martin, S.P. (1996). "Implications of supersymmetric models with natural R-parity conservation". Physical Review D. 54 (3): 2340–2348. arXiv:hep-ph/9602349. Bibcode:1996PhRvD..54.2340M. doi:10.1103/PhysRevD.54.2340. PMID 10020912. S2CID 5751474.
  7. ^ Fayet, P. (1975). "Supergauge invariant extension of the Higgs mechanism and a model for the electron and its neutrino". Nuclear Physics B. 90: 104–124. Bibcode:1975NuPhB..90..104F. doi:10.1016/0550-3213(75)90636-7.
  8. ^ Salam, A.; Strathdee, J. (1975). "Supersymmetry and fermion-number conservation". Nuclear Physics B. 87 (1): 85–92. Bibcode:1975NuPhB..87...85S. doi:10.1016/0550-3213(75)90253-9.
  9. ^ Farrar, G.R.; Weinberg, S. (1983). "Supersymmetry at ordinary energies. II. R invariance, Goldstone bosons, and gauge-fermion masses". Physical Review D. 27 (11): 2732. Bibcode:1983PhRvD..27.2732F. doi:10.1103/PhysRevD.27.2732.
  10. ^ Fayet, P. (1977). "Spontaneously broken supersymmetric theories of weak, electromagnetic and strong interactions". Physics Letters B. 69 (4): 489–494. Bibcode:1977PhLB...69..489F. doi:10.1016/0370-2693(77)90852-8.
  11. ^ Farrar, G.R.; Fayet, P. (1978). "Phenomenology of the production, decay, and detection of new hadronic states associated with supersymmetry". Physics Letters B. 76 (5): 575. Bibcode:1978PhLB...76..575F. doi:10.1016/0370-2693(78)90858-4.
  12. ^ Aulakh, C.S.; Melfo, A.; Rašin, A.; Senjanović, G. (1998). "Supersymmetry and large scale left-right symmetry". Physical Review D. 58 (11): 115007. arXiv:hep-ph/9712551. Bibcode:1998PhRvD..58k5007A. doi:10.1103/PhysRevD.58.115007. S2CID 43296921.
  13. ^ Aulakh, C.S.; Bajc, B.; Melfo, A.; Rašin, A.; Senjanović, G. (2001). "SO(10) theory of R-parity and neutrino mass". Nuclear Physics B. 597 (1–3): 89–109. arXiv:hep-ph/0004031. Bibcode:2001NuPhB.597...89A. doi:10.1016/S0550-3213(00)00721-5. S2CID 119100803.
  14. ^ Aulakh, C.S.; Bajc, B.; Melfo, A.; Senjanović, G.; Vissani, F. (2004). "The minimal supersymmetric grand unified theory". Physics Letters B. 588 (3–4): 196–202. arXiv:hep-ph/0306242. Bibcode:2004PhLB..588..196A. doi:10.1016/j.physletb.2004.03.031. S2CID 119401374.

External links edit

  • Barbier, R.; et al. (2005). "R-parity violating supersymmetry". Physics Reports. 420 (1–6): 1–195. arXiv:hep-ph/0406039. Bibcode:2005PhR...420....1B. doi:10.1016/j.physrep.2005.08.006.
  • "R-parity violating ..." xstructure.inr.ac.ru.
  • FNAL. Archived from the original on 2010-05-28.

parity, concept, particle, physics, minimal, supersymmetric, standard, model, baryon, number, lepton, number, longer, conserved, renormalizable, couplings, theory, since, baryon, number, lepton, number, conservation, have, been, tested, very, precisely, these,. R parity is a concept in particle physics In the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model baryon number and lepton number are no longer conserved by all of the renormalizable couplings in the theory Since baryon number and lepton number conservation have been tested very precisely these couplings need to be very small in order not to be in conflict with experimental data R parity is a Z 2 displaystyle mathbb Z 2 symmetry acting on the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model MSSM fields that forbids these couplings and can be defined as 1 P R 1 3 B L 2 s displaystyle P mathrm R 1 3B L 2s or equivalently as P R 1 3 B L 2 s displaystyle P mathrm R 1 3 B L 2s where s is spin B is baryon number and L is lepton number All Standard Model particles have R parity of 1 while supersymmetric particles have R parity of 1 Note that there are different forms of parity with different effects and principles one should not confuse this parity with any other parity Contents 1 Dark matter candidate 2 R parity violating couplings of the MSSM 3 Proton decay 4 Possible origins of R parity 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksDark matter candidate editWith R parity being preserved the lightest supersymmetric particle LSP cannot decay This lightest particle if it exists may therefore account for the observed missing mass of the universe that is generally called dark matter 2 In order to fit observations it is assumed that this particle has a mass of 100 GeV c2 to 1 TeV c2 is neutral and only interacts through weak interactions and gravitational interactions It is often called a weakly interacting massive particle or WIMP Typically the dark matter candidate of the MSSM is a mixture of the electroweak gauginos and Higgsinos and is called a neutralino In extensions to the MSSM it is possible to have a sneutrino be the dark matter candidate Another possibility is the gravitino which only interacts via gravitational interactions and does not require strict R parity R parity violating couplings of the MSSM editThe renormalizable R parity violating couplings of the MSSM are d 2 8 l 1 U c D c D c displaystyle int d 2 theta lambda 1 U c D c D c nbsp violates B by 1 unit The strongest constraint involving this coupling alone is from the non observation of neutron antineutron oscillations d 2 8 l 2 Q D c L displaystyle int d 2 theta lambda 2 QD c L nbsp violates L by 1 unit The strongest constraint involving this coupling alone is the violation universality of Fermi constant G F displaystyle G F nbsp in quark and leptonic charged current decays d 2 8 l 3 L E c L displaystyle int d 2 theta lambda 3 LE c L nbsp violates L by 1 unit The strongest constraint involving this coupling alone is the violation universality of Fermi constant in leptonic charged current decays d 2 8 k L H u displaystyle int d 2 theta kappa LH u nbsp violates L by 1 unit The strongest constraint involving this coupling alone is that it leads to a large neutrino mass While the constraints on single couplings are reasonably strong if multiple couplings are combined together they lead to proton decay Thus there are further maximal bounds on values of the couplings from maximal bounds on proton decay rate Proton decay edit nbsp Without baryon and lepton number being conserved and taking O 1 displaystyle mathcal O 1 nbsp couplings for the R parity violating couplings the proton can decay in approximately 10 2 seconds or if minimal flavor violation is assumed the proton lifetime can be extended to 1 year Since the proton lifetime is observed to be greater than 1033 to 1034 years depending on the exact decay channel this would highly disfavour the model R parity sets all of the renormalizable baryon and lepton number violating couplings to zero and the proton is stable at the renormalizable level and the lifetime of the proton is increased to 1032 years and is nearly consistent with current observational data Because proton decay involves violating both lepton and baryon number simultaneously no single renormalizable R parity violating coupling leads to proton decay This has motivated the study of R parity violation where only one set of the R parity violating couplings are non zero which is sometimes called the single coupling dominance hypothesis Possible origins of R parity editA very attractive way to motivate R parity is with a B L continuous gauge symmetry which is spontaneously broken at a scale inaccessible to current experiments A continuous U 1 B L displaystyle U 1 B L nbsp forbids renormalizable terms which violate B and L 3 4 5 6 If U 1 B L displaystyle U 1 B L nbsp is only broken by scalar vacuum expectation values or other order parameters that carry even integer values of 3 B L then there exist an exactly conserved discrete remnant subgroup which has the desired properties 7 8 9 10 11 The crucial issue is to determine whether the sneutrino the supersymmetric partner of neutrino which is odd under R parity develops a vacuum expectation value It can be shown on phenomenological grounds that this cannot happen in any theory where U 1 B L displaystyle U 1 B L nbsp is broken at a scale much above the electroweak one This is true in any theory based on a large scale seesaw mechanism 12 As a consequence in such theories R parity remains exact at all energies This phenomenon can arise as an automatic symmetry in SO 10 grand unified theories This natural occurrence of R parity is possible because in SO 10 the Standard Model fermions arise from the 16 dimensional spinor representation while the Higgs arises from a 10 dimensional vector representation In order to make an SO 10 invariant coupling one must have an even number of spinor fields i e there is a spinor parity After GUT symmetry breaking this spinor parity descends into R parity so long as no spinor fields were used to break the GUT symmetry Explicit examples of such SO 10 theories have been constructed 13 14 See also editR symmetryReferences edit Martin S P 6 Sep 2011 A Supersymmetry Primer Advanced Series on Directions in High Energy Physics 18 1 98 arXiv hep ph 9709356 doi 10 1142 9789812839657 0001 ISBN 978 981 02 3553 6 S2CID 118973381 Jungman G Kamionkowski M Griest K 1996 Supersymmetric dark matter Physics Reports 267 5 6 195 373 arXiv hep ph 9506380 Bibcode 1996PhR 267 195J doi 10 1016 0370 1573 95 00058 5 S2CID 119067698 Mohapatra R N 1986 New contributions to neutrinoless double beta decay in supersymmetric theories Physical Review D 34 11 3457 3461 Bibcode 1986PhRvD 34 3457M doi 10 1103 PhysRevD 34 3457 PMID 9957083 Font A Ibanez L E Quevedo F 1989 Does proton stability imply the existence of an extra Z0 PDF Physics Letters B 228 1 79 88 Bibcode 1989PhLB 228 79F doi 10 1016 0370 2693 89 90529 7 Martin S P 1992 Some simple criteria for gauged R parity Physical Review D 46 7 R2769 R2772 arXiv hep ph 9207218 Bibcode 1992PhRvD 46 2769M doi 10 1103 PhysRevD 46 R2769 PMID 10015267 S2CID 14821065 Martin S P 1996 Implications of supersymmetric models with natural R parity conservation Physical Review D 54 3 2340 2348 arXiv hep ph 9602349 Bibcode 1996PhRvD 54 2340M doi 10 1103 PhysRevD 54 2340 PMID 10020912 S2CID 5751474 Fayet P 1975 Supergauge invariant extension of the Higgs mechanism and a model for the electron and its neutrino Nuclear Physics B 90 104 124 Bibcode 1975NuPhB 90 104F doi 10 1016 0550 3213 75 90636 7 Salam A Strathdee J 1975 Supersymmetry and fermion number conservation Nuclear Physics B 87 1 85 92 Bibcode 1975NuPhB 87 85S doi 10 1016 0550 3213 75 90253 9 Farrar G R Weinberg S 1983 Supersymmetry at ordinary energies II R invariance Goldstone bosons and gauge fermion masses Physical Review D 27 11 2732 Bibcode 1983PhRvD 27 2732F doi 10 1103 PhysRevD 27 2732 Fayet P 1977 Spontaneously broken supersymmetric theories of weak electromagnetic and strong interactions Physics Letters B 69 4 489 494 Bibcode 1977PhLB 69 489F doi 10 1016 0370 2693 77 90852 8 Farrar G R Fayet P 1978 Phenomenology of the production decay and detection of new hadronic states associated with supersymmetry Physics Letters B 76 5 575 Bibcode 1978PhLB 76 575F doi 10 1016 0370 2693 78 90858 4 Aulakh C S Melfo A Rasin A Senjanovic G 1998 Supersymmetry and large scale left right symmetry Physical Review D 58 11 115007 arXiv hep ph 9712551 Bibcode 1998PhRvD 58k5007A doi 10 1103 PhysRevD 58 115007 S2CID 43296921 Aulakh C S Bajc B Melfo A Rasin A Senjanovic G 2001 SO 10 theory of R parity and neutrino mass Nuclear Physics B 597 1 3 89 109 arXiv hep ph 0004031 Bibcode 2001NuPhB 597 89A doi 10 1016 S0550 3213 00 00721 5 S2CID 119100803 Aulakh C S Bajc B Melfo A Senjanovic G Vissani F 2004 The minimal supersymmetric grand unified theory Physics Letters B 588 3 4 196 202 arXiv hep ph 0306242 Bibcode 2004PhLB 588 196A doi 10 1016 j physletb 2004 03 031 S2CID 119401374 External links editBarbier R et al 2005 R parity violating supersymmetry Physics Reports 420 1 6 1 195 arXiv hep ph 0406039 Bibcode 2005PhR 420 1B doi 10 1016 j physrep 2005 08 006 R parity violating xstructure inr ac ru R parity violating FNAL Archived from the original on 2010 05 28 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title R parity amp oldid 1161304296, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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