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Higgs Parity, Strong CP, and Dark Matter

Authors :
Dunsky, David
Hall, Lawrence J.
Harigaya, Keisuke
Dunsky, David
Hall, Lawrence J.
Harigaya, Keisuke
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

An exact spacetime parity replicates the $SU(2) \times U(1)$ electroweak interaction, the Higgs boson $H$, and the matter of the Standard Model. This "Higgs Parity" and the mirror electroweak symmetry are spontaneously broken at scale $v' = \left\langle{H'} \right\rangle \gg \left\langle{H}\right\rangle$, yielding the Standard Model below $v'$ with a quartic coupling that essentially vanishes at $v'$: $\lambda_{SM}(v') \sim 10^{-3}$. The strong CP problem is solved as Higgs parity forces the masses of mirror quarks and ordinary quarks to have opposite phases. Dark matter is composed of mirror electrons, $e'$, stabilized by unbroken mirror electromagnetism. These interact with Standard Model particles via kinetic mixing between the photon and the mirror photon, which arises at four-loop level and is a firm prediction of the theory. Physics below $v'$, including the mass and interaction of $e'$ dark matter, is described by $\textit{one fewer parameter}$ than in the Standard Model. The allowed range of $m_{e'}$ is determined by uncertainties in $(\alpha_s, m_t, m_h)$, so that future precision measurements of these will be correlated with the direct detection rate of $e'$ dark matter, which, together with the neutron electric dipole moment, will probe the entire parameter space.<br />Comment: 29 pages, 5 figures. Matches published version. Added references and clarifications

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1097940579
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007.JHEP07(2019)016