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High Energy Physics seminar - Andreas Trautner (University of Bonn, Germany) CP Violation from a Symmetry Principle

AndreasTrautner (University of Bonn, Germany)11/17/17 High Energy Physics Seminar speaker
November 17, 2017
4:00PM - 5:00PM
4138 Physics Research Building

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Add to Calendar 2017-11-17 16:00:00 2017-11-17 17:00:00 High Energy Physics seminar - Andreas Trautner (University of Bonn, Germany) CP Violation from a Symmetry Principle Understanding the origin of CP violation offers a new starting point to address the Standard Model flavor and strong CP puzzles.  Group theoretically, the physical CP transformation of the SM is a special outer automorphism ("symmetry of symmetry") of the theory and I will explain what that means in detail.  Equipped with this, we can understand that there can be other outer automorphisms beyond the usual C,P or T transformations.  On the other hand, certain classes of symmetries do preclude the existence of CP transformations altogether in which case CP is violated by calculable ("geometrical") phases.  I will explain this based on two explicit example models:  In a special three Higgs doublet model the presence of outer automorphisms beyond CP allows for a super simple calculation of VEVs, a reduction of the size of the parameter space by a factor of 24, anticipating the boundaries of the RGE flow and most interestingly,the prediction of quantized CP violating phases.  A second explicit example is a "Scalar-QCD" type of model in which the SU(3) gauge group is spontaneously broken to the small discrete subgroup T7.  In this case CP violation originates with quantized phases while the theta angle is protected at 0. 4138 Physics Research Building Department of Physics physics@osu.edu America/New_York public

Understanding the origin of CP violation offers a new starting point to address the Standard Model flavor and strong CP puzzles.  Group theoretically, the physical CP transformation of the SM is a special outer automorphism ("symmetry of symmetry") of the theory and I will explain what that means in detail.  Equipped with this, we can understand that there can be other outer automorphisms beyond the usual C,P or T transformations.  On the other hand, certain classes of symmetries do preclude the existence of CP transformations altogether in which case CP is violated by calculable ("geometrical") phases.  I will explain this based on two explicit example models:  In a special three Higgs doublet model the presence of outer automorphisms beyond CP allows for a super simple calculation of VEVs, a reduction of the size of the parameter space by a factor of 24, anticipating the boundaries of the RGE flow and most interestingly,
the prediction of quantized CP violating phases.  A second explicit example is a "Scalar-QCD" type of model in which the SU(3) gauge group is spontaneously broken to the small discrete subgroup T7.  In this case CP violation originates with quantized phases while the theta angle is protected at 0.