ترغب بنشر مسار تعليمي؟ اضغط هنا

DFSZ Axion Couplings Revisited

118   0   0.0 ( 0 )
 نشر من قبل Xiao-Gang He
 تاريخ النشر 2020
  مجال البحث
والبحث باللغة English




اسأل ChatGPT حول البحث

Among many possibilities, solar axion has been proposed to explain the electronic recoil events excess observed by Xenon1T collaboration, although it has tension with astrophysical observations. The axion couplings, to photon $g_{agamma}$ and to electron $g_{ae}$ play important roles. These couplings are related to the Peccei-Quinn (PQ) charges $X_f$ for fermions. In most of the calculations, $g_{agamma}$ is obtained by normalizing to the ratio of electromagnetic anomaly factor $E = TrX_f Q^2_f N_c$ ($N_c$ is 3 and 1 for quarks and charged leptons respectively) and QCD anomaly factor $N = TrX_q T(q)$ ($T(q)$ is quarks $SU(3)_c$ index). The broken PQ symmetry generator is used in the calculation which does not seem to extract out the components of broken generator in the axion which are eaten by the $Z$ boson. However, using the physical components of axion or the ratio of anomaly factors should obtain the same results in the DFSZ for $g_{agamma}$. When going beyond the standard DFSZ models, such as variant DFSZ models, where more Higgs doublets and fermions have different PQ charges, one may wonder if the results are different. We show that the two methods obtain the same results as expected, but the axion couplings to quarks and leptons $g_{af}$ (here f indicates one of the fermions in the SM) are more conveniently calculated in the physical axion basis. The result depends on the values of the vacuum expectation values leading to a wider parameter space for $g_{af}$ in beyond the standard DFSZ axion. We also show explicitly how flavor conserving $g_{af}$ couplings can be maintained when there are more than one Higgs doublets couple to the up and down fermion sectors in variant DFSZ models at tree level, and how flavor violating couplings can arise.

قيم البحث

اقرأ أيضاً

We perform for the first time a dedicated analysis of cosmological constraints on DFSZ QCD axion models. Such constructions are especially interesting in light of the recent Xenon-1T excess and of hints from stellar cooling. In DFSZ models, for $m_ag trsim 0.1$ eV, scatterings of pions and muons can produce a sizable cosmic background of thermal axions, that behave similarly to massive neutrinos. However, the pion coupling depends on the alignment between the vevs of two Higgs doublets, and can be significantly suppressed or enhanced with respect to the KSVZ scenario. Using the latest Planck and BAO data, we find $m_aleq 0.2~text{eV}$ at $95%$ C.L., when the axion coupling to pions $c_{api}$ is maximal. Constraints on $m_a$, instead, can be significantly relaxed when $c_{api}$ is small. In particular, we point out that in the so-called DFSZ-II model, where the axion coupling to leptons does not vanish simultaneously with $c_{api}$, production via muons gives $m_aleq 0.6~text{eV}$ at $95%$ C.L., whereas in the DFSZ-I model bounds on $m_a$ can be fully lifted. We then combine cosmological data with recent hints of a DFSZ axion coupled to electrons from the Xenon-1T experiment, finding in this case that the axion mass is constrained to be in the window $0.07 ~text{eV} lesssim m_a lesssim 1.8, (0.3)~text{eV}$ for the DFSZ-I (DFSZ-II) model. A similar analysis with stellar cooling hints gives $3 ~text{meV} lesssim m_a lesssim 0.2 ~text{eV}$ for DFSZ-II, while no constraint arises in the DFSZ-I case. Forthcoming CMB Stage 4 experiments will be able to further test such scenarios; for instance the Xenon-1T window should be fully probed at $2sigma$ for a DFSZ-I axion.
We determine the model-independent component of the couplings of axions to electroweak gauge bosons, induced by the minimal coupling to QCD inherent to solving the strong CP problem. The case of the invisible QCD axion is developed first, and the imp act on $W$ and $Z$ axion couplings is discussed. The analysis is extended next to the generic framework of heavy true axions and low axion scales, corresponding to scenarios with enlarged confining sector. The mass dependence of the coupling of heavy axions to photons, $W$ and $Z$ bosons is determined. Furthermore, we perform a two-coupling-at-a-time phenomenological study where the gluonic coupling together with individual gauge boson couplings are considered. In this way, the regions excluded by experimental data for the axion-$WW$, axion-$ZZ$ and axion-$Zgamma$ couplings are determined and analyzed together with the usual photonic ones. The phenomenological results apply as well to ALPs which have anomalous couplings to both QCD and the electroweak bosons.
Nambu-Goldstone bosons, or axions, may be ubiquitous. Some of the axions may have small masses and thus serve as mediators of long-range forces. In this paper, we study the force mediated by an extremely light axion, $phi$, between the visible sector and the dark sector, where dark matter lives. Since nature does not preserve the CP symmetry, the coupling between dark matter and $phi$ is generically CP-violating. In this case, the induced force is extremely long-range and behaves as an effective magnetic field. If the force acts on electrons or nucleons, the spins of them on Earth precess around a fixed direction towards the galactic center. This provides an experimental opportunity for $phi$ with mass, $m_phi$, and decay constant, $f_phi$, satisfying $m_philesssim 10^{-25},$ eV, $f_philesssim 10^{14},$GeV if the daily modulation of the effective magnetic field signals in magnetometers is measured by using the coherent averaging method. The effective magnetic field induced by an axionic compact object, such as an axion domain wall, is also discussed.
74 - T. Barklow , U. Baur , F. Cuypers 1996
The measurement of anomalous gauge boson self couplings is reviewed for a variety of present and planned accelerators. Sensitivities are compared for these accelerators using models based on the effective Lagrangian approach. The sensitivities descri bed here are for measurement of generic parameters kappa_v, lambda_v, etc., defined in the text. Pre-LHC measurements will not probe these couplings to precision better than O(1/10). The LHC should be sensitive to better than O(1/100), while a future NLC should achieve sensitivity of O(1/1000) to O(1/10000) for center of mass energies ranging from 0.5 to 1.5 TeV.
We propose a new strategy to search for dark matter axions using tunable cryogenic plasmas. Unlike current experiments, which repair the mismatch between axion and photon masses by breaking translational invariance (cavity and dielectric haloscopes), a plasma haloscope enables resonant conversion by matching the axion mass to a plasma frequency. A key advantage is that the plasma frequency is unrelated to the physical size of the device, allowing large conversion volumes. We identify wire metamaterials as a promising candidate plasma, wherein the plasma frequency can be tuned by varying the interwire spacing. For realistic experimental sizes we estimate competitive sensitivity for axion masses $35-400,mu$eV, at least.
التعليقات
جاري جلب التعليقات جاري جلب التعليقات
سجل دخول لتتمكن من متابعة معايير البحث التي قمت باختيارها
mircosoft-partner

هل ترغب بارسال اشعارات عن اخر التحديثات في شمرا-اكاديميا