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Proton decay

In particle physics, proton decay is a hypothetical form of particle decay in which the proton decays into lighter subatomic particles, such as a neutral pion and a positron.[1] The proton decay hypothesis was first formulated by Andrei Sakharov in 1967. Despite significant experimental effort, proton decay has never been observed. If it does decay via a positron, the proton's half-life is constrained to be at least 1.67×1034 years.[2]

The pattern of weak isospins, weak hypercharges, and color charges for particles in the Georgi–Glashow model. Here, a proton, consisting of two up quarks and a down, decays into a pion, consisting of an up and anti-up, and a positron, via an X boson with electric charge −4/3e.

According to the Standard Model, the proton, a type of baryon, is stable because baryon number (quark number) is conserved (under normal circumstances; see Chiral anomaly for an exception). Therefore, protons will not decay into other particles on their own, because they are the lightest (and therefore least energetic) baryon. Positron emission and electron capture—forms of radioactive decay in which a proton becomes a neutron—are not proton decay, since the proton interacts with other particles within the atom.

Some beyond-the-Standard-Model grand unified theories (GUTs) explicitly break the baryon number symmetry, allowing protons to decay via the Higgs particle, magnetic monopoles, or new X bosons with a half-life of 1031 to 1036 years. For comparison, the universe is roughly 1.38×1010 years old.[3] To date, all attempts to observe new phenomena predicted by GUTs (like proton decay or the existence of magnetic monopoles) have failed.

Quantum tunnelling may be one of the mechanisms of proton decay.[4][5][6]

Quantum gravity[7] (via virtual black holes and Hawking radiation) may also provide a venue of proton decay at magnitudes or lifetimes well beyond the GUT scale decay range above, as well as extra dimensions in supersymmetry.[8][9][10][11]

There are theoretical methods of baryon violation other than proton decay including interactions with changes of baryon and/or lepton number other than 1 (as required in proton decay). These included B and/or L violations of 2, 3, or other numbers, or B − L violation. Such examples include neutron oscillations and the electroweak sphaleron anomaly at high energies and temperatures that can result between the collision of protons into antileptons[12] or vice versa (a key factor in leptogenesis and non-GUT baryogenesis).

Baryogenesis edit

Unsolved problem in physics:

Do protons decay? If so, then what is the half-life? Can nuclear binding energy affect this?

One of the outstanding problems in modern physics is the predominance of matter over antimatter in the universe. The universe, as a whole, seems to have a nonzero positive baryon number density – that is, there is more matter than antimatter. Since it is assumed in cosmology that the particles we see were created using the same physics we measure today, it would normally be expected that the overall baryon number should be zero, as matter and antimatter should have been created in equal amounts. This has led to a number of proposed mechanisms for symmetry breaking that favour the creation of normal matter (as opposed to antimatter) under certain conditions. This imbalance would have been exceptionally small, on the order of 1 in every 1010 particles a small fraction of a second after the Big Bang, but after most of the matter and antimatter annihilated, what was left over was all the baryonic matter in the current universe, along with a much greater number of bosons.

Most grand unified theories explicitly break the baryon number symmetry, which would account for this discrepancy, typically invoking reactions mediated by very massive X bosons (
X
)
or massive Higgs bosons (
H0
). The rate at which these events occur is governed largely by the mass of the intermediate
X
or
H0
particles, so by assuming these reactions are responsible for the majority of the baryon number seen today, a maximum mass can be calculated above which the rate would be too slow to explain the presence of matter today. These estimates predict that a large volume of material will occasionally exhibit a spontaneous proton decay.

Experimental evidence edit

Proton decay is one of the key predictions of the various grand unified theories (GUTs) proposed in the 1970s, another major one being the existence of magnetic monopoles. Both concepts have been the focus of major experimental physics efforts since the early 1980s. To date, all attempts to observe these events have failed; however, these experiments have been able to establish lower bounds on the half-life of the proton. Currently, the most precise results come from the Super-Kamiokande water Cherenkov radiation detector in Japan: a 2015 analysis placed a lower bound on the proton's half-life of 1.67×1034 years via positron decay,[2] and similarly, a 2012 analysis gave a lower bound to the proton's half-life of 1.08×1034 years via antimuon decay,[13] close to a supersymmetry (SUSY) prediction of 1034–1036 years.[14] An upgraded version, Hyper-Kamiokande, probably will have sensitivity 5–10 times better than Super-Kamiokande.[2]

Theoretical motivation edit

Despite the lack of observational evidence for proton decay, some grand unification theories, such as the SU(5) Georgi–Glashow model and SO(10), along with their supersymmetric variants, require it. According to such theories, the proton has a half-life of about 1031~1036 years and decays into a positron and a neutral pion that itself immediately decays into two gamma ray photons:


p+
 
→  
e+
  +
π0
  └→   2
γ

Since a positron is an antilepton this decay preserves B − L number, which is conserved in most GUTs.

Additional decay modes are available (e.g.:
p+

μ+
+
π0
),[13] both directly and when catalyzed via interaction with GUT-predicted magnetic monopoles.[15] Though this process has not been observed experimentally, it is within the realm of experimental testability for future planned very large-scale detectors on the megaton scale. Such detectors include the Hyper-Kamiokande.

Early grand unification theories (GUTs) such as the Georgi–Glashow model, which were the first consistent theories to suggest proton decay, postulated that the proton's half-life would be at least 1031 years. As further experiments and calculations were performed in the 1990s, it became clear that the proton half-life could not lie below 1032 years. Many books from that period refer to this figure for the possible decay time for baryonic matter. More recent findings have pushed the minimum proton half-life to at least 1034–1035 years, ruling out the simpler GUTs (including minimal SU(5) / Georgi–Glashow) and most non-SUSY models. The maximum upper limit on proton lifetime (if unstable), is calculated at 6×1039 years, a bound applicable to SUSY models,[16] with a maximum for (minimal) non-SUSY GUTs at 1.4×1036 years.[16](part 5.6)

Although the phenomenon is referred to as "proton decay", the effect would also be seen in neutrons bound inside atomic nuclei. Free neutrons—those not inside an atomic nucleus—are already known to decay into protons (and an electron and an antineutrino) in a process called beta decay. Free neutrons have a half-life of 10 minutes (610.2±0.8 s)[17] due to the weak interaction. Neutrons bound inside a nucleus have an immensely longer half-life – apparently as great as that of the proton.

Projected proton lifetimes edit

Theory class Proton lifetime (years)[18] Ruled out experimentally?
Minimal SU(5) (Georgi–Glashow) 1030–1031 Yes
Minimal SUSY SU(5) 1028–1032 Yes
SUGRA SU(5) 1032–1034 Yes
SUSY SO(10) 1032–1035 Partially
SUSY SU(5) (MSSM) ~1034 Partially
SUSY SU(5) – 5 dimensions 1034–1035 Partially
SUSY SO(10) MSSM G(224) 2×1034 No
Minimal (Basic) SO(10) – Non-SUSY < ~1035 (maximum range) No
Flipped SU(5) (MSSM) 1035–1036 No

The lifetime of the proton in vanilla SU(5) can be naively estimated as  .[19] Supersymmetric GUTs with reunification scales around µ ~ 2×1016 GeV/c2 yield a lifetime of around 1034 yr, roughly the current experimental lower bound.

Decay operators edit

Dimension-6 proton decay operators edit

The dimension-6 proton decay operators are       and   where   is the cutoff scale for the Standard Model. All of these operators violate both baryon number (B) and lepton number (L) conservation but not the combination B − L.

In GUT models, the exchange of an X or Y boson with the mass ΛGUT can lead to the last two operators suppressed by  . The exchange of a triplet Higgs with mass M can lead to all of the operators suppressed by  . See Doublet–triplet splitting problem.

Dimension-5 proton decay operators edit

In supersymmetric extensions (such as the MSSM), we can also have dimension-5 operators involving two fermions and two sfermions caused by the exchange of a tripletino of mass M. The sfermions will then exchange a gaugino or Higgsino or gravitino leaving two fermions. The overall Feynman diagram has a loop (and other complications due to strong interaction physics). This decay rate is suppressed by   where MSUSY is the mass scale of the superpartners.

Dimension-4 proton decay operators edit

 

In the absence of matter parity, supersymmetric extensions of the Standard Model can give rise to the last operator suppressed by the inverse square of sdown quark mass. This is due to the dimension-4 operators
q




c
and
u
c
d
c

c
.

The proton decay rate is only suppressed by   which is far too fast unless the couplings are very small.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Ishfaq Ahmad (1969), "Radioactive decays by Protons. Myth or reality?", The Nucleus, pp. 69–70
  2. ^ a b c Bajc, Borut; Hisano, Junji; Kuwahara, Takumi; Omura, Yuji (2016). "Threshold corrections to dimension-six proton decay operators in non-minimal SUSY SU(5) GUTs". Nuclear Physics B. 910: 1. arXiv:1603.03568. Bibcode:2016NuPhB.910....1B. doi:10.1016/j.nuclphysb.2016.06.017. S2CID 119212168.
  3. ^ Francis, Matthew R. "Do protons decay?". symmetry magazine. Retrieved 2020-11-12.
  4. ^ Talou, P.; Carjan, N.; Strottman, D. (1998). "Time-dependent properties of proton decay from crossing single-particle metastable states in deformed nuclei". Physical Review C. 58 (6): 3280–3285. arXiv:nucl-th/9809006. Bibcode:1998PhRvC..58.3280T. doi:10.1103/PhysRevC.58.3280. S2CID 119075457.
  5. ^ "adsabs.harvard.edu".
  6. ^ Trixler, F. (2013). "Quantum Tunnelling to the Origin and Evolution of Life". Current Organic Chemistry. 17 (16): 1758–1770. doi:10.2174/13852728113179990083. PMC 3768233. PMID 24039543.
  7. ^ Bambi, Cosimo; Freese, Katherine (2008). "Dangerous implications of a minimum length in quantum gravity". Classical and Quantum Gravity. 25 (19): 195013. arXiv:0803.0749. Bibcode:2008CQGra..25s5013B. doi:10.1088/0264-9381/25/19/195013. hdl:2027.42/64158. S2CID 2040645.
  8. ^ Adams, Fred C.; Kane, Gordon L.; Mbonye, Manasse; Perry, Malcolm J. (2001). "Proton Decay, Black Holes, and Large Extra Dimensions - NASA/ADS". International Journal of Modern Physics A. 16 (13): 2399–2410. arXiv:hep-ph/0009154. Bibcode:2001IJMPA..16.2399A. doi:10.1142/S0217751X0100369X. S2CID 14989175.
  9. ^ Al-Modlej, Abeer; Alsaleh, Salwa; Alshal, Hassan; Ali, Ahmed Farag (2019). "Proton decay and the quantum structure of space–time". Canadian Journal of Physics. 97 (12): 1317–1322. arXiv:1903.02940. Bibcode:2019CaJPh..97.1317A. doi:10.1139/cjp-2018-0423. hdl:1807/96892. S2CID 119507878.
  10. ^ Giddings, Steven B. (1995). "The black hole information paradox". arXiv:hep-th/9508151.
  11. ^ Alsaleh, Salwa; Al-Modlej, Abeer; Farag Ali, Ahmed (2017). "Virtual black holes from the generalized uncertainty principle and proton decay". Europhysics Letters. 118 (5): 50008. arXiv:1703.10038. Bibcode:2017EL....11850008A. doi:10.1209/0295-5075/118/50008. S2CID 119369813.
  12. ^ Tye, S.-H. Henry; Wong, Sam S. C. (2015). "Bloch wave function for the periodic sphaleron potential and unsuppressed baryon and lepton number violating processes". Physical Review D. 92 (4): 045005. arXiv:1505.03690. Bibcode:2015PhRvD..92d5005T. doi:10.1103/PhysRevD.92.045005. S2CID 73528684.
  13. ^ a b H. Nishino; Super-K Collaboration (2012). "Search for Proton Decay via
    p+

    e+

    π0
    and
    p+

    μ+

    π0
    in a Large Water Cherenkov Detector". Physical Review Letters. 102 (14): 141801. arXiv:0903.0676. Bibcode:2009PhRvL.102n1801N. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.102.141801. PMID 19392425. S2CID 32385768.
  14. ^ "Proton lifetime is longer than 1034 years" 2011-07-16 at the Wayback Machine. www-sk.icrr.u-tokyo.ac.jp. 25 November 2009.
  15. ^ Sreekantan, B.V. (1984). "Searches for proton decay and superheavy magnetic monopoles" (PDF). Journal of Astrophysics and Astronomy. 5 (3): 251–271. Bibcode:1984JApA....5..251S. doi:10.1007/BF02714542. S2CID 53964771.
  16. ^ a b Nath, Pran; Fileviez Pérez, Pavel (2007). "Proton stability in grand unified theories, in strings and in branes". Physics Reports. 441 (5–6): 191–317. arXiv:hep-ph/0601023. Bibcode:2007PhR...441..191N. doi:10.1016/j.physrep.2007.02.010. S2CID 119542637.
  17. ^ Olive, K. A.; et al. (Particle Data Group) (2014). "Review of Particle Physics – N Baryons" (PDF). Chinese Physics C. 38 (9): 090001. arXiv:astro-ph/0601168. Bibcode:2014ChPhC..38i0001O. doi:10.1088/1674-1137/38/9/090001. S2CID 118395784.
  18. ^ Bueno, Antonio; Melgarejo, Antonio J; Navas, Sergio; Dai, Zuxiang; Ge, Yuanyuan; Laffranchi, Marco; Meregaglia, Anselmo; Rubbia, André (2007-04-11). "Nucleon decay searches with large liquid Argon TPC detectors at shallow depths: atmospheric neutrinos and cosmogenic backgrounds". Journal of High Energy Physics. 2007 (4): 041. arXiv:hep-ph/0701101. Bibcode:2007JHEP...04..041B. doi:10.1088/1126-6708/2007/04/041. ISSN 1029-8479. S2CID 119426496.
  19. ^ Chanowitz, Michael S.; Ellis, John; Gaillard, Mary K. (3 October 1977). "The price of natural flavour conservation in neutral weak interactions". Nuclear Physics B. 128 (3): 506–536. Bibcode:1977NuPhB.128..506C. doi:10.1016/0550-3213(77)90057-8. ISSN 0550-3213. S2CID 121007369.

Further reading edit

  • C. Amsler; Particle Data Group (2008). "Review of Particle Physics – N Baryons" (PDF). Physics Letters B. 667 (1): 1–6. Bibcode:2008PhLB..667....1A. doi:10.1016/j.physletb.2008.07.018. hdl:1854/LU-685594. S2CID 227119789.
  • K. Hagiwara; Particle Data Group (2002). "Review of Particle Physics – N Baryons" (PDF). Physical Review D. 66 (1): 010001. Bibcode:2002PhRvD..66a0001H. doi:10.1103/PhysRevD.66.010001.
  • F. Adams; G. Laughlin (2000-06-19). The Five Ages of the Universe : Inside the Physics of Eternity. Simon and Schuster. ISBN 978-0-684-86576-8.
  • L.M. Krauss (2001). Atom : An Odyssey from the Big Bang to Life on Earth. Little Brown. ISBN 978-0-316-49946-0.
  • D.-D. Wu; T.-Z. Li (1985). "Proton decay, annihilation or fusion?". Zeitschrift für Physik C. 27 (2): 321–323. Bibcode:1985ZPhyC..27..321W. doi:10.1007/BF01556623. S2CID 121868029.
  • P. Nath; P. Fileviez Perez (2007). "Proton stability in grand unified theories, in strings and in branes". Physics Reports. 441 (5–6): 191–317. arXiv:hep-ph/0601023. Bibcode:2007PhR...441..191N. doi:10.1016/j.physrep.2007.02.010. S2CID 119542637.

External links edit

  • Proton decay at Super-Kamiokande
  • Pictorial history of the IMB experiment
  • Luciano Maiani (8 February 2006). The problem of proton decay (PDF). Third NO-VE International Workshop on Neutrino Oscillations in Venice. Venice.

proton, decay, this, article, about, hypothetical, decay, protons, into, other, subatomic, particles, type, radioactive, decay, which, nucleus, ejects, proton, proton, emission, radioactive, decay, where, proton, within, nucleus, converts, neutron, positron, e. This article is about the hypothetical decay of protons into other subatomic particles For the type of radioactive decay in which a nucleus ejects a proton see Proton emission For the radioactive decay where a proton within a nucleus converts to a neutron see positron emission In particle physics proton decay is a hypothetical form of particle decay in which the proton decays into lighter subatomic particles such as a neutral pion and a positron 1 The proton decay hypothesis was first formulated by Andrei Sakharov in 1967 Despite significant experimental effort proton decay has never been observed If it does decay via a positron the proton s half life is constrained to be at least 1 67 1034 years 2 The pattern of weak isospins weak hypercharges and color charges for particles in the Georgi Glashow model Here a proton consisting of two up quarks and a down decays into a pion consisting of an up and anti up and a positron via an X boson with electric charge 4 3 e According to the Standard Model the proton a type of baryon is stable because baryon number quark number is conserved under normal circumstances see Chiral anomaly for an exception Therefore protons will not decay into other particles on their own because they are the lightest and therefore least energetic baryon Positron emission and electron capture forms of radioactive decay in which a proton becomes a neutron are not proton decay since the proton interacts with other particles within the atom Some beyond the Standard Model grand unified theories GUTs explicitly break the baryon number symmetry allowing protons to decay via the Higgs particle magnetic monopoles or new X bosons with a half life of 1031 to 1036 years For comparison the universe is roughly 1 38 1010 years old 3 To date all attempts to observe new phenomena predicted by GUTs like proton decay or the existence of magnetic monopoles have failed Quantum tunnelling may be one of the mechanisms of proton decay 4 5 6 Quantum gravity 7 via virtual black holes and Hawking radiation may also provide a venue of proton decay at magnitudes or lifetimes well beyond the GUT scale decay range above as well as extra dimensions in supersymmetry 8 9 10 11 There are theoretical methods of baryon violation other than proton decay including interactions with changes of baryon and or lepton number other than 1 as required in proton decay These included B and or L violations of 2 3 or other numbers or B L violation Such examples include neutron oscillations and the electroweak sphaleron anomaly at high energies and temperatures that can result between the collision of protons into antileptons 12 or vice versa a key factor in leptogenesis and non GUT baryogenesis Contents 1 Baryogenesis 2 Experimental evidence 3 Theoretical motivation 4 Projected proton lifetimes 5 Decay operators 5 1 Dimension 6 proton decay operators 5 2 Dimension 5 proton decay operators 5 3 Dimension 4 proton decay operators 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksBaryogenesis editMain article Baryogenesis Unsolved problem in physics Do protons decay If so then what is the half life Can nuclear binding energy affect this more unsolved problems in physics One of the outstanding problems in modern physics is the predominance of matter over antimatter in the universe The universe as a whole seems to have a nonzero positive baryon number density that is there is more matter than antimatter Since it is assumed in cosmology that the particles we see were created using the same physics we measure today it would normally be expected that the overall baryon number should be zero as matter and antimatter should have been created in equal amounts This has led to a number of proposed mechanisms for symmetry breaking that favour the creation of normal matter as opposed to antimatter under certain conditions This imbalance would have been exceptionally small on the order of 1 in every 1010 particles a small fraction of a second after the Big Bang but after most of the matter and antimatter annihilated what was left over was all the baryonic matter in the current universe along with a much greater number of bosons Most grand unified theories explicitly break the baryon number symmetry which would account for this discrepancy typically invoking reactions mediated by very massive X bosons X or massive Higgs bosons H0 The rate at which these events occur is governed largely by the mass of the intermediate X or H0 particles so by assuming these reactions are responsible for the majority of the baryon number seen today a maximum mass can be calculated above which the rate would be too slow to explain the presence of matter today These estimates predict that a large volume of material will occasionally exhibit a spontaneous proton decay Experimental evidence editProton decay is one of the key predictions of the various grand unified theories GUTs proposed in the 1970s another major one being the existence of magnetic monopoles Both concepts have been the focus of major experimental physics efforts since the early 1980s To date all attempts to observe these events have failed however these experiments have been able to establish lower bounds on the half life of the proton Currently the most precise results come from the Super Kamiokande water Cherenkov radiation detector in Japan a 2015 analysis placed a lower bound on the proton s half life of 1 67 1034 years via positron decay 2 and similarly a 2012 analysis gave a lower bound to the proton s half life of 1 08 1034 years via antimuon decay 13 close to a supersymmetry SUSY prediction of 1034 1036 years 14 An upgraded version Hyper Kamiokande probably will have sensitivity 5 10 times better than Super Kamiokande 2 Theoretical motivation editDespite the lack of observational evidence for proton decay some grand unification theories such as the SU 5 Georgi Glashow model and SO 10 along with their supersymmetric variants require it According to such theories the proton has a half life of about 1031 1036 years and decays into a positron and a neutral pion that itself immediately decays into two gamma ray photons p e p0 2gSince a positron is an antilepton this decay preserves B L number which is conserved in most GUTs Additional decay modes are available e g p m p0 13 both directly and when catalyzed via interaction with GUT predicted magnetic monopoles 15 Though this process has not been observed experimentally it is within the realm of experimental testability for future planned very large scale detectors on the megaton scale Such detectors include the Hyper Kamiokande Early grand unification theories GUTs such as the Georgi Glashow model which were the first consistent theories to suggest proton decay postulated that the proton s half life would be at least 1031 years As further experiments and calculations were performed in the 1990s it became clear that the proton half life could not lie below 1032 years Many books from that period refer to this figure for the possible decay time for baryonic matter More recent findings have pushed the minimum proton half life to at least 1034 1035 years ruling out the simpler GUTs including minimal SU 5 Georgi Glashow and most non SUSY models The maximum upper limit on proton lifetime if unstable is calculated at 6 1039 years a bound applicable to SUSY models 16 with a maximum for minimal non SUSY GUTs at 1 4 1036 years 16 part 5 6 Although the phenomenon is referred to as proton decay the effect would also be seen in neutrons bound inside atomic nuclei Free neutrons those not inside an atomic nucleus are already known to decay into protons and an electron and an antineutrino in a process called beta decay Free neutrons have a half life of 10 minutes 610 2 0 8 s 17 due to the weak interaction Neutrons bound inside a nucleus have an immensely longer half life apparently as great as that of the proton Projected proton lifetimes editTheory class Proton lifetime years 18 Ruled out experimentally Minimal SU 5 Georgi Glashow 1030 1031 YesMinimal SUSY SU 5 1028 1032 YesSUGRA SU 5 1032 1034 YesSUSY SO 10 1032 1035 PartiallySUSY SU 5 MSSM 1034 PartiallySUSY SU 5 5 dimensions 1034 1035 PartiallySUSY SO 10 MSSM G 224 2 1034 NoMinimal Basic SO 10 Non SUSY lt 1035 maximum range NoFlipped SU 5 MSSM 1035 1036 NoThe lifetime of the proton in vanilla SU 5 can be naively estimated as t p M X 4 m p 5 textstyle tau p sim M X 4 m p 5 nbsp 19 Supersymmetric GUTs with reunification scales around µ 2 1016 GeV c2 yield a lifetime of around 1034 yr roughly the current experimental lower bound Decay operators editDimension 6 proton decay operators edit The dimension 6 proton decay operators are q q q ℓ L 2 textstyle qqq ell Lambda 2 nbsp d c u c u c e c L 2 textstyle d c u c u c e c Lambda 2 nbsp e c u c q q L 2 textstyle overline e c overline u c qq Lambda 2 nbsp and d c u c q ℓ L 2 textstyle overline d c overline u c q ell Lambda 2 nbsp where L displaystyle Lambda nbsp is the cutoff scale for the Standard Model All of these operators violate both baryon number B and lepton number L conservation but not the combination B L In GUT models the exchange of an X or Y boson with the mass L GUT can lead to the last two operators suppressed by 1 L GUT 2 textstyle 1 Lambda text GUT 2 nbsp The exchange of a triplet Higgs with mass M can lead to all of the operators suppressed by 1 M 2 textstyle 1 M 2 nbsp See Doublet triplet splitting problem Proton decay These graphics refer to the X bosons and Higgs bosons nbsp Dimension 6 proton decay mediated by the X boson 3 2 5 6 in SU 5 GUT nbsp Dimension 6 proton decay mediated by theX boson 3 2 1 6 in flipped SU 5 GUT nbsp Dimension 6 proton decay mediated by thetriplet Higgs T 3 1 1 3 and theanti triplet Higgs T 3 1 1 3 in SU 5 GUTDimension 5 proton decay operators edit In supersymmetric extensions such as the MSSM we can also have dimension 5 operators involving two fermions and two sfermions caused by the exchange of a tripletino of mass M The sfermions will then exchange a gaugino or Higgsino or gravitino leaving two fermions The overall Feynman diagram has a loop and other complications due to strong interaction physics This decay rate is suppressed by 1 M M SUSY textstyle 1 MM text SUSY nbsp where MSUSY is the mass scale of the superpartners Dimension 4 proton decay operators edit nbsp In the absence of matter parity supersymmetric extensions of the Standard Model can give rise to the last operator suppressed by the inverse square of sdown quark mass This is due to the dimension 4 operators q ℓ d c and u cd cd c The proton decay rate is only suppressed by 1 M SUSY 2 textstyle 1 M text SUSY 2 nbsp which is far too fast unless the couplings are very small See also editAge of the universe B L Virtual black hole Weak hypercharge X and Y bosons Iron starReferences edit Ishfaq Ahmad 1969 Radioactive decays by Protons Myth or reality The Nucleus pp 69 70 a b c Bajc Borut Hisano Junji Kuwahara Takumi Omura Yuji 2016 Threshold corrections to dimension six proton decay operators in non minimal SUSY SU 5 GUTs Nuclear Physics B 910 1 arXiv 1603 03568 Bibcode 2016NuPhB 910 1B doi 10 1016 j nuclphysb 2016 06 017 S2CID 119212168 Francis Matthew R Do protons decay symmetry magazine Retrieved 2020 11 12 Talou P Carjan N Strottman D 1998 Time dependent properties of proton decay from crossing single particle metastable states in deformed nuclei Physical Review C 58 6 3280 3285 arXiv nucl th 9809006 Bibcode 1998PhRvC 58 3280T doi 10 1103 PhysRevC 58 3280 S2CID 119075457 adsabs harvard edu Trixler F 2013 Quantum Tunnelling to the Origin and Evolution of Life Current Organic Chemistry 17 16 1758 1770 doi 10 2174 13852728113179990083 PMC 3768233 PMID 24039543 Bambi Cosimo Freese Katherine 2008 Dangerous implications of a minimum length in quantum gravity Classical and Quantum Gravity 25 19 195013 arXiv 0803 0749 Bibcode 2008CQGra 25s5013B doi 10 1088 0264 9381 25 19 195013 hdl 2027 42 64158 S2CID 2040645 Adams Fred C Kane Gordon L Mbonye Manasse Perry Malcolm J 2001 Proton Decay Black Holes and Large Extra Dimensions NASA ADS International Journal of Modern Physics A 16 13 2399 2410 arXiv hep ph 0009154 Bibcode 2001IJMPA 16 2399A doi 10 1142 S0217751X0100369X S2CID 14989175 Al Modlej Abeer Alsaleh Salwa Alshal Hassan Ali Ahmed Farag 2019 Proton decay and the quantum structure of space time Canadian Journal of Physics 97 12 1317 1322 arXiv 1903 02940 Bibcode 2019CaJPh 97 1317A doi 10 1139 cjp 2018 0423 hdl 1807 96892 S2CID 119507878 Giddings Steven B 1995 The black hole information paradox arXiv hep th 9508151 Alsaleh Salwa Al Modlej Abeer Farag Ali Ahmed 2017 Virtual black holes from the generalized uncertainty principle and proton decay Europhysics Letters 118 5 50008 arXiv 1703 10038 Bibcode 2017EL 11850008A doi 10 1209 0295 5075 118 50008 S2CID 119369813 Tye S H Henry Wong Sam S C 2015 Bloch wave function for the periodic sphaleron potential and unsuppressed baryon and lepton number violating processes Physical Review D 92 4 045005 arXiv 1505 03690 Bibcode 2015PhRvD 92d5005T doi 10 1103 PhysRevD 92 045005 S2CID 73528684 a b H Nishino Super K Collaboration 2012 Search for Proton Decay via p e p0 and p m p0 in a Large Water Cherenkov Detector Physical Review Letters 102 14 141801 arXiv 0903 0676 Bibcode 2009PhRvL 102n1801N doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 102 141801 PMID 19392425 S2CID 32385768 Proton lifetime is longer than 1034 years Archived 2011 07 16 at the Wayback Machine www sk icrr u tokyo ac jp 25 November 2009 Sreekantan B V 1984 Searches for proton decay and superheavy magnetic monopoles PDF Journal of Astrophysics and Astronomy 5 3 251 271 Bibcode 1984JApA 5 251S doi 10 1007 BF02714542 S2CID 53964771 a b Nath Pran Fileviez Perez Pavel 2007 Proton stability in grand unified theories in strings and in branes Physics Reports 441 5 6 191 317 arXiv hep ph 0601023 Bibcode 2007PhR 441 191N doi 10 1016 j physrep 2007 02 010 S2CID 119542637 Olive K A et al Particle Data Group 2014 Review of Particle Physics N Baryons PDF Chinese Physics C 38 9 090001 arXiv astro ph 0601168 Bibcode 2014ChPhC 38i0001O doi 10 1088 1674 1137 38 9 090001 S2CID 118395784 Bueno Antonio Melgarejo Antonio J Navas Sergio Dai Zuxiang Ge Yuanyuan Laffranchi Marco Meregaglia Anselmo Rubbia Andre 2007 04 11 Nucleon decay searches with large liquid Argon TPC detectors at shallow depths atmospheric neutrinos and cosmogenic backgrounds Journal of High Energy Physics 2007 4 041 arXiv hep ph 0701101 Bibcode 2007JHEP 04 041B doi 10 1088 1126 6708 2007 04 041 ISSN 1029 8479 S2CID 119426496 Chanowitz Michael S Ellis John Gaillard Mary K 3 October 1977 The price of natural flavour conservation in neutral weak interactions Nuclear Physics B 128 3 506 536 Bibcode 1977NuPhB 128 506C doi 10 1016 0550 3213 77 90057 8 ISSN 0550 3213 S2CID 121007369 Further reading editC Amsler Particle Data Group 2008 Review of Particle Physics N Baryons PDF Physics Letters B 667 1 1 6 Bibcode 2008PhLB 667 1A doi 10 1016 j physletb 2008 07 018 hdl 1854 LU 685594 S2CID 227119789 K Hagiwara Particle Data Group 2002 Review of Particle Physics N Baryons PDF Physical Review D 66 1 010001 Bibcode 2002PhRvD 66a0001H doi 10 1103 PhysRevD 66 010001 F Adams G Laughlin 2000 06 19 The Five Ages of the Universe Inside the Physics of Eternity Simon and Schuster ISBN 978 0 684 86576 8 L M Krauss 2001 Atom An Odyssey from the Big Bang to Life on Earth Little Brown ISBN 978 0 316 49946 0 D D Wu T Z Li 1985 Proton decay annihilation or fusion Zeitschrift fur Physik C 27 2 321 323 Bibcode 1985ZPhyC 27 321W doi 10 1007 BF01556623 S2CID 121868029 P Nath P Fileviez Perez 2007 Proton stability in grand unified theories in strings and in branes Physics Reports 441 5 6 191 317 arXiv hep ph 0601023 Bibcode 2007PhR 441 191N doi 10 1016 j physrep 2007 02 010 S2CID 119542637 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Proton decay Proton decay at Super Kamiokande Pictorial history of the IMB experiment Luciano Maiani 8 February 2006 The problem of proton decay PDF Third NO VE International Workshop on Neutrino Oscillations in Venice Venice Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Proton decay amp oldid 1196881510, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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