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Theory of Neutrino Mass

There are a confusing variety of models of neutrino mass. Here, I give a brief survey of the principle classes. For more detail, see [4] and [5].

Mass terms describe transitions between right (R) and left (L)-handedgif states. A Dirac mass term, which conserves lepton number, involves transitions between two different Weyl neutrinosgif, and . That is, the right-handed state is different from , the CPT partner of the . The form is

where the Dirac field is defined as . Thus a Dirac neutrino has four components (the CPT partner of ), and the mass term allows a conserved lepton number . This and other types of mass terms can easily be generalized to three or more families, in which case the masses become matrices. The charged current transitions then involve a leptonic mixing matrix (analogous to the Cabibbo-Kobayashi-Maskawa (CKM) quark mixing matrix), which can lead to neutrino oscillations between the light neutrinos.

For an ordinary Dirac neutrino the is active ( i.e., is in an doublet) and the is sterilegif ( i.e., is an singlet, with no weak interactions except those due to mixing). The transition is , where I is the weak isospin. The mass requires breaking and is generated by a Yukawa coupling

One has , where the vacuum expectation value (VEV) of the Higgs doublet is GeV, and is the Yukawa coupling. A Dirac mass is just like the quark and charged lepton masses, but that leads to the question of why it is so small: one would require in order to have eV.

A Majorana mass, which violates lepton number by two units , makes use of the right-handed antineutrino, , rather than a separate Weyl neutrino. It is a transition from an antineutrino into a neutrino. Equivalently, it can be viewed as the creation or annihilation of two neutrinos, and if present it can therefore lead to neutrinoless double beta decay. The form of a Majorana mass term is

where is a self-conjugate two-component state satisfying , where C is the charge conjugation matrix. If is active then and m must be generated by either an elementary Higgs triplet or by an effective operator involving two Higgs doublets arranged to transform as a triplet.

For an elementary triplet , where is a Yukawa coupling and is the triplet VEV. The simplest implementation is the Gelmini-Roncadelli (GR) model [6], in which lepton number is spontaneously broken by . The original GR model is now excluded by the LEP data on the Z width. Variant models involving explicit lepton number violation or in which the Majoron (the Goldstone boson associated with lepton number violation) is mainly a weak singlet ( invisible Majoron models) are still possible.

For an effective operator one expects , where C is a dimensionless constant and M is the scale of the new physics which generates the operator. The most familiar example is the seesaw model, to be discussed below.

It is also possible to consider mixed models in which both Majorana and Dirac mass terms are present. For two Weyl neutrinos one has a mass term

 

where and are the two Weyl states. and are Majorana masses which transform as weak triplets and singlets, respectively (assuming that the states are respectively active and sterile), while is a Dirac mass term. Diagonalizing this matrix one finds that the physical particle content is given by two Majorana mass eigenstatesgif .

An especialy interesting case is the seesaw limit [7], , in which there are two Majorana neutrinos

with masses

Thus, there is one heavy neutrino and one neutrino much lighter than the typical Dirac scale. Such models are a popular and natural way of generating neutrino masses much smaller than the other fermion masses.

There are literally hundreds of versions of the seesaw and related models [5]. The heavy scale can range anywhere from the TeV scale to the Planck scale. The TeV scale models are motivated, for example, by left-right symmetric models [8]. Typically, the Dirac masses are of the order of magnitude of the corresponding charged lepton masses, so that one expects masses of order eV, 10 keV, and 1 MeV for the , and , respectively. (The latter two violate cosmological bounds unless they decay rapidly and invisibly.) Intermediate scales, such as GeV, are motivated by grand unification and typically yield masses in the range relevant to hot dark matter, and solar and atmospheric neutrino oscillations. The grand unified theories often imply Dirac masses , where is the mass of the up-type quark of the corresponding family. Depending on whether there is also a family hierarchy of heavy masses , the light masses

 

of the family may vary approximately quadratically with (the quadratic seesaw) or linearly (the linear seesaw) [9]. in (7) is a radiative correction. Typical light neutrino masses in the quadratic seesaw are ( eV, eV, 10 eV) for GeV (the intermediate seesaw, expected in some superstring models or in grand unified theories with multiple breaking stages). Such masses would correspond to in the Sun, and a dark matter candidate (or, for a somewhat smaller mass, atmospheric neutrino oscillations). Similarly, for GeV (the grand unified seesaw, expected in old-fashioned grand unified theories with large Higgs representations) one typically finds smaller masses around ( eV, , eV), suggesting in the Sun. In such models one often (but not always) finds that the lepton and quark mixing matrices are similar.

A very different class of models are those in which the neutrino masses are zero at the tree level (typically because no Weyl singlets or elementary Higgs triplets are introduced), but only generated by loops [10], i.e., radiative generation. Such models are very attractive in principle and explain the smallness of . However, the actual implementation generally requires the ad hoc introduction of new Higgs particles with nonstandard electroweak quantum numbers and lepton number-violating couplings.



next up previous
Next: Laboratory Limits Up: Implications of Neutrino Mass Previous: Motivations




Mon Nov 27 19:37:58 EST 1995