Probe of New Physics using Precision Measurement of the Electron Magnetic Moment
Abstract
The anomalous magnetic moment of the electron is determined experimentally with an accuracy of 2.8× 10-13 and the uncertainty may decrease by an order of magnitude in the future. While the current data is in excellent agreement with the standard model, the possible future improvement in the error in ae= aeexp- aetheory has recently drawn interest in the electron anomalous magnetic moment as a possible probe of new physics beyond the standard model. In this work we give an analysis of such physics in an extension of the minimal supersymmetric standard model with a vector multiplet. In the extended model the electroweak contribution to the anomalous magnetic moment of the electron include loop diagrams involving in addition to the exchange of W and Z, the exchange of charginos, sneutrinos and mirror sneutrinos, and the exchange of neutralinos, sleptons and mirror sleptons. The analysis shows that a contribution to the electron magnetic moment much larger than expected by me2/mμ2 scaling of the deviation of the muon anomalous magnetic moment over the standard model prediction, i.e., aμ = 3 × 10-9 as given by the Brookhaven experiment, can be gotten within the MSSM extension. Effects of CP violating phases in the extended MSSM model on the corrections to the supersymmetric electroweak contributions to ae are also investigated. The analysis points to the possibility of detection of new physics effects with modest improvement on the error in ae= aeexp - aetheory.
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