Dark matter and flavor changing in the flipped 3-3-1 model
Abstract
The flipped 3-3-1 model discriminates lepton families instead of the quark ones in normal sense, where the left-handed leptons are in two triplets plus one sextet while the left-handed quarks are in antitriplets, under SU(3)L. We investigate a minimal setup of this model and determine novel consequences of dark matter stability, neutrino mass generation, and lepton flavor violation. Indeed, the model conserves a noncommutative B-L symmetry, which prevents the unwanted vacua and interactions and provides the matter parity and dark matter candidates that along with normal matter form gauge multiplets. The neutrinos obtain suitable masses via a type I and II seesaw mechanism. The nonuniversal couplings of Z' with leptons govern lepton flavor violating processes such as μ → 3e, μ→ e μe, μ-e conversion in nuclei, semileptonic τ→ μ(e) decays, as well as the nonstandard interactions of neutrinos with matter. This Z' may also set the dark matter observables and give rise to the LHC dilepton and dijet signals.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.