5,116 research outputs found
Lepton Flavor Non-Universality in B decays from Dynamical Yukawas
The basic features of quark and lepton mass matrices can be successfully
explained by natural minima of a generic potential with dynamical Yukawa fields
invariant under the flavor symmetry.
If this symmetry is gauged, in order to avoid potentially dangerous Goldstone
bosons, and small perturbations are added to exactly fit the observed pattern
of fermion masses, the spectrum of massive flavor gauge bosons can naturally
explain the hints for new physics in transitions,
including . In particular, the desired pattern of the Standard Model
Yukawa couplings is compatible with a gauged in the quark
sector, and in the lepton sector spontaneously
broken around the TeV scale. In order to explain the aforementioned
experimental hints, the corresponding neutral gauge bosons are required to mix,
yielding to potentially observable signals in dimuon resonance searches at the
LHC.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figures. v2: version published in Phys.Lett.
Redistribution of particle and anti-particle entanglement in non-inertial frames
We analyse the entanglement tradeoff between particle and anti-particle modes
of a Dirac field from the perspective of inertial and uniformly accelerated
observers. Our results show that a redistribution of entanglement between
particle and anti-particle modes plays a key role in the survival of fermionic
field entanglement in the infinite acceleration limit.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, revtex4. Added journal referenc
A three-site gauge model for flavor hierarchies and flavor anomalies
We present a three-site Pati-Salam gauge model able to explain the Standard
Model flavor hierarchies while, at the same time, accommodating the recent
experimental hints of lepton-flavor non-universality in decays. The model
is consistent with low- and high-energy bounds, and predicts a rich spectrum of
new states at TeV scale that could be probed in the near future by the
high- experiments at the LHC.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures. v2: Added section II.B, matching the PLB versio
Gauge-invariant implications of the LHCb measurements on Lepton-Flavour Non-Universality
We study the implications of the recent measurements of and
by the LHCb collaboration. We do that by adopting a model-independent approach
based on the Standard Model Effective Field Theory (SMEFT), in which the
dominant new physics effects are encoded in the coefficients of dimension-six
operators respecting the full Standard Model (SM) gauge symmetry. After
providing simplified expressions for and , we determine the
implications of the recent LHCb results for these observables on the
coefficients of the SMEFT operators at low and high energies. We also take into
account all data, which combined lead to effective New
Physics (NP) scenarios with SM pulls in excess of 5~. Thus the
operators discussed in this paper would be the first dimension-six terms in the
SM Lagrangian to be detected experimentally. Indirect constraints on these
operators are also discussed. The results of this paper transcend the
singularity of the present situation, and set a standard for future analyses in
transitions when the NP is assumed to lie above the electroweak scale.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figures, 3 tables. v2: references added, typos corrected,
improved discussion in Sec. V, corrected coefficient of C7 in formula for
RKstar in the low-bin, new figure with global fit in terms of SMEFT
coefficients. Conclusions unchanged. v3: minor addition, shorter version to
be published in PR
How does monetary policy affect the income class structure? Evidence from the Eurozone.
This work provides evidence on the potential effects of monetary policy on the income class structure via stimulating economic activity and employment in the Eurozone countries over the period 2007Q3-2016Q1. Based on European Union Statistics on Income and Living Conditions (EU-SILC) data, we compute the size of income classes (lower, lower-middle, upper-middle, and upper) for the stats that originated the Economic and Monetary Union (EMU-11) and analyse the impact of monetary policy impulses under a Bayesian Vector Autoregressive approach. We focus on the earnings heterogeneity and the income composition channel and find that a monetary easing shock involving a decrease short-term nominal interest rate has diverse effects on the different income classes, which seems to have led to a more equal income distribution. As theoretically argued by these monetary policy transmission mechanisms, our results confirm the GDP growth and the decrease in unemployment caused by the monetary policies implemented by the European Central Bank since the onset of the financial crisis have had a positive effect for those households located at the bottom of the income-class structure as well as for the middle class.Campus de Excelencia Internacional Andalucía Tec
Phenomenology of an model with lepton-flavour non-universality
We investigate a gauge extension of the Standard Model in light of the
observed hints of lepton universality violation in and decays at BaBar, Belle and LHCb. The model consists of an
extended gauge group which breaks spontaneously around the TeV scale to the
electroweak gauge group. Fermion mixing effects with vector-like fermions give
rise to potentially large new physics contributions in flavour transitions
mediated by and bosons. This model can ease tensions
in -physics data while satisfying stringent bounds from flavour physics, tau
decays, and electroweak precision data. Possible ways to test the proposed new
physics scenario with upcoming experimental measurements are discussed. Among
other predictions, the lepton flavour violating ratios , with , are found to be reduced with respect to the Standard Model expectation
.Comment: 46 pages, 11 figures. v2: version published in JHE
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