Lepton Transmutation in the Dualized Standard Model
Abstract
The successful explanation of fermion mixing and of the fermion mass hierarchy by the Dualized Standard Model (DSM) scheme is based on the premises of a fermion mass matrix rotating in generation space with changing scales at a certain speed, which could in principle lead to sizeable flavour-violation observable in high sensitivity experiments such as BaBar. However, a full perturbative calculation to 1-loop order reported here shows that this kinematical, flavour-violating effect of a rotating mass matrix is off-set in the DSM by parallel effects from rotating wave functions and vertices giving in the end only very small flavour-violations which are unlikely to be detectable by present experiments. The result means that at least for the present the DSM scheme has survived yet another threat to its validity, which is indeed its most stringent and dangerous to-date. It also provides some clarification of certain concepts connected with the rotating mass matrix which had previously been found puzzling.
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