Large mixing of light and heavy neutrinos in seesaw models and the LHC

Xiao-Gang He, Sechul Oh, Jusak Tandean, and Chung-Cheng Wen
Phys. Rev. D 80, 073012 – Published 23 October 2009

Abstract

In the type-I seesaw model the size of mixing between light and heavy neutrinos, ν and N, respectively, is of order the square root of their mass ratio, (mν/mN)1/2, with only one generation of the neutrinos. Since the light-neutrino mass must be less than an eV or so, the mixing would be very small, even for a heavy-neutrino mass of order a few hundred GeV. This would make it unlikely to test the model directly at the LHC, as the amplitude for producing the heavy neutrino is proportional to the mixing size. However, it has been realized for some time that, with more than one generation of light and heavy neutrinos, the mixing can be significantly larger in certain situations. In this paper we explore this possibility further and consider specific examples in detail in the context of type-I seesaw. We study its implications for the single production of the heavy neutrinos at the LHC via the main channel qq¯W*lN involving an ordinary charged lepton l. We then extend the discussion to the type-III seesaw model, which has richer phenomenology due to presence of the charged partners of the heavy neutrinos, and examine the implications for the single production of these heavy leptons at the LHC. In the latter model the new kinds of solutions that we find also make it possible to have sizable flavor-changing neutral-current effects in processes involving ordinary charged leptons.

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  • Received 20 July 2009

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.80.073012

©2009 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

Xiao-Gang He, Sechul Oh, Jusak Tandean, and Chung-Cheng Wen

  • Department of Physics and Center for Theoretical Sciences, National Taiwan University, Taipei 106, Taiwan

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Issue

Vol. 80, Iss. 7 — 1 October 2009

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