Neutrino mixing and RK anomaly in U(1)X models: a bottom-up approach

Abstract

We identify a class of U(1)X models which can explain the RK anomaly and the neutrino mixing pattern, by using a bottom-up approach. The different X-charges of lepton generations account for the lepton universality violation required to explain RK. In addition to the three right-handed neutrinos needed for the Type-I seesaw mechanism, these minimal models only introduce an additional doublet Higgs and a singlet scalar. While the former helps in reproducing the quark mixing structure, the latter gives masses to neutrinos and the new gauge boson Z. Our bottom-up approach determines the X-charges of all particles using theoretical consistency and experimental constraints. We find the parameter space allowed by the constraints from neutral meson mixing, rare b s decays and direct collider searches for Z. Such a Z may be observable at the ongoing run of the Large Hadron Collider with a few hundred fb-1 of integrated luminosity.

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