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Confronting the conventional ideas of grand unification with fermion masses, neutrino oscillations and proton decay

Abstract

It is noted that one is now in possession of a set of facts, which may be viewed as the matching pieces of a puzzle; in that all of them can be resolved by just one idea - that is grand unification. These include: (i) the observed family-structure, (ii) quantization of electric charge, (iii) meeting of the three gauge couplings, (iv) neutrino oscillations; in particular the mass squared-difference {delta}m{sup 2}({nu}{sub {mu}} - {nu}{sub {tau}}) (suggested by SuperK), (v) the intricate pattern of the masses and mixings of the fermions, including the smallness of V{sub cb} and the largeness of {theta}{sub {nu}{sub {mu}{nu}}{sub {tau}}}{sup osc}, and (vi) the need for B-L as a generator to implement baryogenesis (via leptogenesis). All these pieces fit beautifully together within a single puzzle board framed by supersymmetric unification, based on SO(10) or a string-unified G(224)-symmetry. The two notable pieces of the puzzle still missing, however, are proton decay and supersymmetry. A concrete proposal is presented, within a predictive SO(10)/G(224)- framework, that successfully describes the masses and mixings of all fermions, including the neutrinos - with eight predictions, all in agreement with observation. Within this framework, a systematic study of proton decay is carried out, which  More>>
Authors:
Pati, J C [1] 
  1. Department of Physics, University of Maryland, College Park (United States) and Stanford Linear Accelerator Center, Menlo Park (United States)
Publication Date:
Sep 15, 2002
Product Type:
Conference
Report Number:
INIS-XA-861; LNS-0210003
Resource Relation:
Conference: 2001 Summer school on particle physics, Trieste (Italy), 18 Jun - 6 Jul 2001; Other Information: 93 refs, 2 tabs; Related Information: In: 2001 Summer school on particle physics, ICTP lecture notes CD seriesv. 10, by Masiero, A. [SISSA, International School for Advanced Studies, Trieste (Italy)]; Senjanovic, G.; Smirnov, A.Yu.; Thompson, G. [Abdus Salam ICTP, Trieste (Italy)] (eds.), 220 pages.
Subject:
72 PHYSICS OF ELEMENTARY PARTICLES AND FIELDS; ELECTRIC CHARGES; GRAND UNIFIED THEORY; KAONS NEUTRAL; LIFETIME; MASS; MATRIX ELEMENTS; MUON NEUTRINOS; NEUTRINO OSCILLATION; PARTICLE DECAY; PIONS NEUTRAL; POSITRONS; PROTONS; QUANTIZATION; RENORMALIZATION; SO-10 GROUPS; SUPERSYMMETRY; TAU NEUTRINOS
OSTI ID:
20909660
Research Organizations:
Abdus Salam International Centre for Theoretical Physics, Trieste (Italy)
Country of Origin:
IAEA
Language:
English
Other Identifying Numbers:
Other: Grant DE-FG02-96ER-41015; Contract DE-AC03-76SF00515; ISBN 92-95003-13-6; TRN: XA0503391071993
Availability:
Available from INIS in electronic form; Also available on-line: http://www.ictp.it
Submitting Site:
INIS
Size:
page(s) 114-182
Announcement Date:
Sep 20, 2007

Citation Formats

Pati, J C. Confronting the conventional ideas of grand unification with fermion masses, neutrino oscillations and proton decay. IAEA: N. p., 2002. Web.
Pati, J C. Confronting the conventional ideas of grand unification with fermion masses, neutrino oscillations and proton decay. IAEA.
Pati, J C. 2002. "Confronting the conventional ideas of grand unification with fermion masses, neutrino oscillations and proton decay." IAEA.
@misc{etde_20909660,
title = {Confronting the conventional ideas of grand unification with fermion masses, neutrino oscillations and proton decay}
author = {Pati, J C}
abstractNote = {It is noted that one is now in possession of a set of facts, which may be viewed as the matching pieces of a puzzle; in that all of them can be resolved by just one idea - that is grand unification. These include: (i) the observed family-structure, (ii) quantization of electric charge, (iii) meeting of the three gauge couplings, (iv) neutrino oscillations; in particular the mass squared-difference {delta}m{sup 2}({nu}{sub {mu}} - {nu}{sub {tau}}) (suggested by SuperK), (v) the intricate pattern of the masses and mixings of the fermions, including the smallness of V{sub cb} and the largeness of {theta}{sub {nu}{sub {mu}{nu}}{sub {tau}}}{sup osc}, and (vi) the need for B-L as a generator to implement baryogenesis (via leptogenesis). All these pieces fit beautifully together within a single puzzle board framed by supersymmetric unification, based on SO(10) or a string-unified G(224)-symmetry. The two notable pieces of the puzzle still missing, however, are proton decay and supersymmetry. A concrete proposal is presented, within a predictive SO(10)/G(224)- framework, that successfully describes the masses and mixings of all fermions, including the neutrinos - with eight predictions, all in agreement with observation. Within this framework, a systematic study of proton decay is carried out, which (a) pays special attention to its dependence on the fermion masses, including the superheavy Majorana masses of the right-handed neutrinos, and (b) limits the threshold corrections so as to preserve natural coupling unification. The study updates prior work by Babu, Pati and Wilczek, in the context of both MSSM and its (interesting) variant, the so-called ESSM, by allowing for improved values of the matrix elements and of the short and long-distance renormalization effects. It shows that a conservative upper limit on the proton lifetime is about (1/3 - 2) x 10{sup 34} years, with {nu}-barK{sup +} being the dominant decay mode, and quite possibly {mu}{sup p}+K{sup 0} and e{sup +}{pi}{sup 0} being prominent. This in turn strongly suggests that an improvement in the current sensitivity by a factor of five to ten (compared to SuperK) ought to reveal proton decay. Otherwise some promising and remarkably successful ideas on unification would suffer a major setback. For comparison, some alternatives to the conventional approach to unification pursued here are mentioned at the end. (author)}
place = {IAEA}
year = {2002}
month = {Sep}
}