- #36
mormonator_rm
- 184
- 1
blechman said:What, precisely, is this "gauge diquark boson"? There's no such object living in the standard model. The canonical example of proton decay in the standard model comes from the dimension-6 operator:
[tex]
\frac{c}{M^2}\overline{Q}\gamma^\mu Q\overline{Q}\gamma_\mu L
[/tex]
where Q, L are the quark and lepton weak-isospin doublets; c is an order one constant and M is the scale of new physics (the cutoff). This operator would destroy a u and d quark, and create a lepton and an antiquark, mediating the decay p --> pi+e. This operator does not violate any gauge symmetries, and therefore it is allowed; it violates B and L, but not B-L. But it is a 4-quark operator, and is therefore dimension 6 (each fermion has dimension 3/2 in 4D spacetime).
The example you gave would involve the existence of a new gauge symmetry. This is the kind of things that happens in GUT models. But when you break the GUT symmetry and integrate out all of the heavy extra gauge bosons, you end up with operators like the one I wrote down, with [itex]M\sim M_{\rm GUT}[/itex].
Does that help?
Actually, that proton decay could be slightly restricted. If you think about it;
[tex]
p \rightarrow \pi^0 + e^+
[/tex]
is most likely to occur with [tex]\pi^0[/tex] in either a pure [tex]d\bar{d}[/tex] or pure [tex]u\bar{u}[/tex] state, since the basic interaction has to fall from either;
[tex]
d + (u + u) \rightarrow d + (\bar{d} + e^+)
[/tex]
or;
[tex]
u + (u + d) \rightarrow u +(\bar{u} + e^+)
[/tex]
Now, in the standard model we can probably say that this arrangement allows for equal amplitude of decay in either of these directions based on the near flavor symmetry of up and down, meaning that the decay width can be calculated without any flavor limitations. This is because [tex]\pi^0 = \frac{u\bar{u}-d\bar{d}}{\sqrt{2}}[/tex]. This works if quarks and electrons are fundamental particles.
However, in the regime of Rishon Model, this problem takes on a different shape. When Rishons are factored in, the possibility of;
[tex]
u + (u + d) \rightarrow u +(\bar{u} + e^+)
[/tex]
falls relative to;
[tex]
d + (u + u) \rightarrow d + (\bar{d} + e^+)
[/tex]
because the latter requires only rearrangement of the initial Rishons, whereas the first requires a [tex]V\overline{V}[/tex] annihilation followed by [tex]T\overline{T}[/tex] production, which could reduce its probability greatly.
If the Standard Model is absolutely correct, and quarks and leptons are fundamental, then we should see the decay [tex]p \rightarrow \pi^0 + e^+[/tex] at the conventionally calculated rate. If Rishon Model is true, then we should observe [tex]p \rightarrow \pi^0 + e^+[/tex] at about half the rate prescribed by the Standard Model calculations.
Last edited: