Abstract
Measurements of angular correlations in nuclear beta decay are important tests of the Standard Model (SM). Among those, the so-called D correlation parameter occupies a particular place because it is odd under time reversal, and because the experimental sensitivity is at the \(10^{-4}\) level, with plans of further improvement in the near future. Using effective field theory (EFT) techniques, we reassess its potential to discover or constrain new physics beyond the SM. We provide a comprehensive classification of CP-violating EFT scenarios which generate a shift of the D parameter away from the SM prediction. We show that, in each scenario, a shift larger than \(10^{-5}\) is in serious tension with the existing experimental data, where bounds coming from electric dipole moments and LHC observables play a decisive role. The tension can only be avoided by fine tuning of the parameters in the UV completion of the EFT. We illustrate this using examples of leptoquark UV completions. Finally, we comment on the possibility to probe CP-conserving new physics via the D parameter.
Similar content being viewed by others
Explore related subjects
Discover the latest articles, news and stories from top researchers in related subjects.Avoid common mistakes on your manuscript.
1 Introduction
CP violation is an essential ingredient in the fundamental theory of particles and interactions. It is present in the Standard Model (SM) in the guise of an invariant phase of the Cabibbo–Kobayashi–Maskawa (CKM) matrix. Matter–antimatter asymmetry in the universe strongly hints at the existence of additional sources of CP violation from beyond the Standard Model (BSM). On the theory side, our experience with quantum field theory so far suggests that CP-violating phases in the interaction Lagrangian are generic. If that is also the case in the theory underlying the SM, then we expect to eventually observe deviations from the SM predictions in a host of CP-violating observables. In fact, several CP-violating observables, such as e.g. the electric dipole moment (EDM) of the neutron or the kaon mass mixing, are potentially sensitive to new physics at enormously high scales, orders of magnitude beyond the direct reach of the Large Hadron Collider (LHC). This fact makes such CP-violating observables a likely place where new physics will be first discovered. Conversely, non-observation of non-standard source of CP violation so far provides stringent constraints on virtually every BSM scenario.
In this paper our focus is on CP violation in nuclear beta decay. Consider the process \({{{\mathcal {N}}}} \rightarrow {{{\mathcal {N}}}'} e^- {\bar{\nu }}_e\) (\(\beta ^-\) decay) or \({{{\mathcal {N}}}} \rightarrow {{{\mathcal {N}}}'} e^+ \nu _e\) (\(\beta ^+\) decay), where \({{{\mathcal {N}}}}\) and \({{{\mathcal {N}}}}'\) the parent and daughter nuclei. At the leading (zero-th) order in expansion in \(1/m_{{{\mathcal {N}}}}\), after summing over beta particle and daughter nucleus polarizations, the differential distribution of the decay products takes the most general form [1]
where \(m_e\) is the electron mass, \({\varvec{J}}\) is the polarization vector of the parent nucleus and J is its spin, \({\varvec{j}}\) is the unit vector in the polarization direction, and \({\varvec{k}}_e\), \({\varvec{k}}_\nu \), \(E_e\), \(E_\nu \) are the 3-momenta and the energies of the beta particle and of the neutrino. The correlation coefficients b, a, A, B, and \({\hat{c}}\) are T-even and, with the exception of the Fierz term b, they receive \(\mathcal {O}(1)\) contributions in the SM at the leading order, that is at \(\mathcal {O}(\alpha _{\textrm{EM}}^0)\) and at \(\mathcal {O}(1/m_N^0)\) in the non-relativistic expansion in the inverse nucleon mass \(m_N\). The highlighted correlation coefficient D is on the other hand T-odd (because both spin and momenta are T-odd), and is zero in the SM at the leading order. The leading SM contributions arise from an interference between one-loop Coulomb corrections and the subleading \(\mathcal {O}(1/m_N^1)\) contributions to the amplitude [2]. Due to the double suppression by \(\alpha Z_{{{\mathcal {N}}}'}\) and \(m_e/m_N\), the SM contribution is predicted to be small, \(|D_{\textrm{SM}}| \lesssim 10^{-4}\), and in fact has not been observed experimentally yet in any beta transition. This is just as good, as it leaves a lot of room to spot non-standard contributions to D. In particular, CP violation in the fundamental theory underlying the SM could leave an imprint in the form of complex phases of Wilson coefficients in the EFT for beta decay. Such complex phases would contribute to D at the leading order, potentially inducing \(D_{\textrm{BSM}}\) of comparable magnitude to \(|D_{\textrm{SM}}|\).
The current experimental situation regarding the D parameter is summarized in Table 1. So far this correlation coefficient was measured in neutron and \({}^{19}\)Ne beta decay with the uncertainty of order \(10^{-4}\). The experimental sensitivity is going to be improved in the near future [3]. The ongoing experiment MORA at JYFL will provide a proof-of-principle measurement in \({}^{23}\)Mg decay at the \(5 \times 10^{-4}\) level. Subsequently, measurements at the DESIR facility at GANIL are expected to improve the sensitivity to an \(4 \times 10^{-5})\) level. Even better sensitivity should be achieved for \({}^{39}\)Ca decay, provided a beam with a large enough yield can be produced.
Motivated by this imminent progress, in this paper we reassess the potential of D measurements to discover or constrain physics beyond the SM [4,5,6,7]. In Sect. 2 we present a model-independent analysis employing techniques of effective field theory (EFT). From the low-energy perspective, the D parameter probes certain combinations of the Wilson coefficients in the EFT at the nucleon scale. At this level, D provides unique information that is currently unavailable from other probes, in particular about imaginary parts of the Wilson coefficients. Furthermore, we connect the nucleon level EFT to more fundamental EFTs at higher energies, below and above the electroweak scale. The latter EFTs are commonly employed in the particle physics literature, and the mapping between their operators and many specific BSM models is well known. We classify the CP-violating EFT scenarios according to which operator is responsible for generating the shift \(\Delta D\) of the D parameter away from the SM prediction. Then we show that, in each scenario, \(|\Delta D| \gtrsim 10^{-5}\) is in serious tension with the existing experimental data, most often with EDMs, but sometimes also with pion decay and/or LHC searches. This tension can only be avoided by fine tuning of the parameters in the UV completion of the EFTs. In Sect. 3 the discussion is illustrated in concrete BSM settings involving leptoquarks. We demonstrate how each EFT scenario leading to \(\Delta D\) can be realized by integrating out leptoquarks with CP-violating couplings to the first generation of the SM fermions. Then we take into account the constraints on such leptoquark models from a host of low- and high-energy experimental probes, including the direct and indirect searches at the LHC. We determine the maximal value of \(|\Delta D|\) allowed by existing experimental constraints without fine-tuning. The results confirm the earlier EFT estimates, for \({}^{23}\)Mg we find \(|\Delta D| \lesssim 8 \times 10^{-6}\) in the best case scenario.
In Sect. 4 we try another approach. We point out that the D parameter can also probe completely CP-conserving BSM scenarios. In the presence of non-standard scalar and tensor currents in the nucleon-level EFT, leading order contributions to beta decay interfere with the electromagnetic Coulomb corrections. This effect contributes to the D parameter even when all the EFT Wilson coefficients are real [8]. From this perspective, the D parameter becomes another precision probe of CP-conserving scalar and tensor currents, on par with more familiar probes in superallowed \(0^+ \rightarrow 0^+\), neutron, and mirror beta decays (see [9] for a review). At the moment, the constraints extracted from D are sill inferior, however improving the sensitivity to the \(\mathcal {O}(10^{-5})\) level will allow one to improve the existing per-mille level bounds obtained in the global analysis in Ref. [10].
2 EFT analysis
2.1 Nucleon-level EFT
Beta transitions can be described [13] in the framework of the pionless EFT [14]. The Lagrangian is organized in a non-relativistic expansion in \({\varvec{\nabla }}/m_N\):
where \({\varvec{\nabla }}\) denotes spatial derivatives and \({{{\mathcal {L}}}}^{(n)}\) refers to \(\mathcal {O}({\varvec{\nabla }}^n/m_N^n)\) terms. We will focus on the leading order term \({{{\mathcal {L}}}}^{(0)}\). At this order, the pionless EFT approach to beta decay is equivalent to taking a non-relativistic limit of the famous Lee–Yang Lagrangian written down 70 years ago in Ref. [15]. The leading Lagrangian contains the following interactions relevant for beta decay:Footnote 1
The nucleon degrees of freedom are described by non-relativistic quantum fields \(\psi _{N, a}\), \(N=p,n\), \(a=1,2\). Compared to the Lee–Yang Lagrangian [15], the relativistic nucleon bilinears (\({\bar{p}} \gamma ^\mu n\), \({\bar{p}} \gamma ^\mu \gamma _5 n\), \({\bar{p}} n\), \({\bar{p}} \gamma _5 n\), \({\bar{p}} \sigma ^{\mu \nu } n\)) are replaced in Eq. (2.2) by their non-relativistic limits, which reduce to just two structures (\(\psi _p^\dagger \psi _n\), \(\psi _p^\dagger \sigma ^k\psi _n\)). Note that, in the process, the pseudoscalar interactions, present in [15], drop out because they are \(\mathcal {O}( {\varvec{\nabla }}/m_N)\) and thus belong to \({{{\mathcal {L}}}}^{(1)}\). We work in the isospin limit where the proton and the neutron have the common mass \(m_N\). For the lepton fields we use the relativistic 2-component spinor notation, following the conventions of Ref. [19]. The sigma matrices are defined as \(\sigma ^\mu = (1, \varvec{\sigma })\), \( {\bar{\sigma }}^\mu = (1, - \varvec{\sigma })\), and \(\varvec{\sigma } = (\sigma ^1,\sigma ^2,\sigma ^3)\) is a 3-vector of the usual Pauli matrices. In this language, \(\psi \) and \({\bar{\psi }}^c\) correspond to the left- and right-handed components of a spin-1/2 Dirac fermion. The connection to the 4-component notation in the chiral representation is \(\Psi = \begin{pmatrix} \psi _\alpha \\ {\bar{\psi }}^c{}^{{\dot{\beta }}} \end{pmatrix}\), \({\bar{\Psi }} = \begin{pmatrix} \psi ^c{}^{\alpha } \\ {\bar{\psi }}_{{\dot{\beta }}} \end{pmatrix}\), \(\gamma ^\mu = \begin{pmatrix} 0 &{} \sigma ^\mu \\ {\bar{\sigma }}^\mu &{} 0 \end{pmatrix}\). To ease the comparison with other works let us note that the corresponding identities involving Lorentz tensor structures made out of fermion bilinears can be trivially recovered from
and taking into account that the same identities hold when simultaneously changing any (barred or not) \(\psi _{i}\leftrightarrow \psi _{i}^{c}\) and \(\Psi _{iL}\leftrightarrow \Psi _{iR}^{C}\); and/or \(\psi _{j}^c\leftrightarrow \psi _{j}\) and \(\Psi _{jR}\leftrightarrow \Psi _{jL}^{C}\), where \(\Psi _{L(R)}^{C}\equiv C \bar{\Psi }_{L(R)}^{T}\). We have defined \(\Sigma ^{\mu \nu }=\frac{i}{2}[\gamma ^{\mu },\gamma ^{\nu }]\), \(\sigma ^{\mu \nu }\equiv \frac{i}{2}(\sigma ^{\mu }\bar{\sigma }^{\nu }-\sigma ^{\nu }\bar{\sigma }^{\mu })\) and \(\bar{\sigma }^{\mu \nu }\equiv \frac{i}{2}(\bar{\sigma }^{\mu }\sigma ^{\nu }-\bar{\sigma }^{\nu }\sigma ^{\mu })\).
The neutrinos are treated as massless and we allow for the possibility of right-handed neutrinos contributing to beta decay. For the Wilson coefficients we use the conventions of Ref. [10], where \(C_X^+\) (\(C_X^-\)) parametrize interactions of left-handed (right-handed) neutrinos. Our conventions are simply related to the commonly used \(C_X\) and \(C_X'\) variables introduced by Lee and Yang [15]: \(C_X = (C_X^+ + C_X^-)/2\), \(C_X' = (C_X^+ - C_X^-)/2\). The situation where the right-handed neutrino is absent from the low-energy EFT (e.g. because it has a large Majorana mass) can be described by setting \(C_X^- = 0\) for all X.
The different correlations entering Eq. (1.1) as a function of the couplings of the Lagrangian of Eq. (2.2) were originally obtained, up to electromagnetic corrections, in Ref. [1]. For the same spin of the parent and daughter nuclei, \(J=J'\), the corresponding D correlation is
Here r is the ratio of the Gamow–Teller and Fermi matrix elements. For the neutron decay \(r=\sqrt{3}\), while for nuclei with the mass number \(A>1\) it can be extracted from experimental data. Note that in the absence of electromagnetism the D parameter is non-zero only if at least some of the Wilson coefficients have distinct complex phases. Notice also that, as originally shown in Ref. [8], Coulomb corrections to the formula in Eq. (2.4) can induce a non-zero D even for real Wilson coefficients. The Coulomb corrections and their impact on the prospects of detecting a non-zero D will be discussed later in Sect. 4.
2.2 Quark-level EFT
At a more fundamental level, nuclear beta decays probe charged-current interactions between the first generation of quarks and leptons. We consider an EFT for these degrees of freedom valid between the scales of \(\sim 2\) GeV and the electroweak scale \(\sim m_W\). We will refer to this EFT as the \(\nu \)WEFT. The leading order effective interactions contributing to beta decay can be described by the following relativistic Lagrangian:
where u and d are the up quark, down quark, \(V_{ud}\) is an element of the unitary CKM matrix, and \(v \approx 246.22\) GeV is related by \(G_F = (\sqrt{2} v^2)^{-1}\) to the Fermi constant \(G_F\) measured in muon decay. The Wilson coefficients \(\epsilon _X\) and \({\tilde{\epsilon }}_X\), \(X = L,R,S,P,T\), parametrize non-SM effects, and \(\epsilon _X = {\tilde{\epsilon }}_X = 0\) in the SM limit.
At tree level, the map between the Wilson coefficients in Eq. (2.2) and in Eq. (2.5) is given by [9]
Here, \(g_{V,A,S,T}\) are non-perturbative parameters referred to as the vector, axial, scalar, and tensor charges of the nucleon. For the vector charge, \(g_V = 1\) up to (negligible) quadratic corrections in isospin-symmetry breaking [20]. The remaining charges are not known from symmetry considerations alone and must be fixed from experimental data or by lattice calculations. In this work we will use the FLAG’21 values: \(g_A = 1.246(28)\) [21,22,23,24], \(g_S = 1.022(100)\), and \(g_T = 0.989(34)\) [21, 22].
Using this map, we can translate Eq. (2.4) into the quark-level Wilson coefficients:
where we neglected the new physics corrections originating from the denominator of Eq. (2.4), but we kept the linear and quadratic effects in Wilson coefficients coming from the numerator. We can recast the above in the semi-numerical form as
This is the master equation for the D parameter that we will use extensively in the following. The values of the proportionality constant \(\kappa _D\) for selected beta transitions are displayed in Table 1. At the linear level, the D parameter only probes CP violation entering via the so-called right-handed currents, that is the effective weak interactions between left-handed leptons and right-handed quarks. At the quadratic level, other non-standard currents are probed as well, in particular the scalar and tensor currents involving the left- and right-handed neutrinos.
2.3 EFT above the electroweak scale
We move to discussing the effective theory above the electroweak scale that, under very broad assumptions, UV-completes the \(\nu \)WEFT, which is often referred to as the \(\nu \)SMEFT [25, 26]. It has the gauge symmetry \(SU(3)\times SU(2)\times U(1)\) and the degrees of freedom are those of the SM plus three generations of right-handed neutrinos which are gauge singlets. The Lagrangian consists of all independent gauge invariant operators made of these fields organized in the expansion in powers of \(1/\Lambda \), according to the canonical dimensions of the operators. We will discuss dimension-6 and dimension-8 operators that can induce the (tilde) \(\epsilon _X\) Wilson coefficients in the Lagrangian Eq. (2.5) below the electroweak scale. We will be interested in generating \(\epsilon _X\) entering the master equation (2.8), leading to a non-zero value of the D-parameter. The master equation contains four distinct contributions in the square bracket, and we will discuss in turn how to generate the corresponding Wilson coefficients.
Scenario I. We start with operators generating \(\epsilon _R\) below the electroweak scale. One possible source is the dimension-6 operator
where H is the SM Higgs doublet field, and \({\tilde{H}}_a = \epsilon ^{ab} H^*_b\) (in our conventions the Higgs VEV is given by \(\langle H^T\rangle = (0,v)/\sqrt{2}\) with \(v\approx 246\, {\textrm{GeV}}\)). This operator induces a coupling of the W boson to the right-handed up and down quarks:
Integrating out the W boson at tree level, below the electroweak scale one finds the 4-fermion interaction \(({\bar{e}}{\bar{\sigma }}_\mu \nu ) (u^c \sigma ^\mu {\bar{d}}^c)\) from Eq. (2.5) with the Wilson coefficient
Consequently, in this scenario the D parameter depends on the \(\nu \)SMEFT Wilson coefficients as
Therefore one way to induce the D parameter is to generate the operators in Eq. (2.9) with a complex Wilson coefficient \(C_{\phi u d}\) in the EFT above the electroweak scale. This option may seem promising because the D-parameter appears at \(\mathcal {O}(\Lambda ^{-2})\), and then it can be sizable even if the BSM scale \(\Lambda \) is relatively large. Moreover, the Wilson coefficient \(C_{\phi u d}\) is induced by several well-motivated BSM models, in particular by the left-right symmetric models [27]. However, this scenario faces one phenomenological problem [5], which can already be seen at the EFT level. The problem stems from the fact that, together with \(\epsilon _R\), another 4-fermion operator is generated below the electroweak scale:
with \(C_{1LR} = V_{ud} C_{\phi u d}\). Thus the magnitude and phase of \(C_{1LR}\) is perfectly correlated with that of \(\epsilon _R\), which is at the origin of the D parameter. On the other hand, the imaginary part of \(C_{1LR}\) is strongly constrained by nuclear EDMs. Formally the strongest constraint comes from the measurement of EDM in mercury, but the relation between \(d_{{}^{199}Hg}\) and \({\textrm{Im}} C_{1LR}\) suffers from large theoretical uncertainties. To be conservative, here we will use the slightly weaker but theoretically more robust constraint from the neutron EDM measurement. Using [28]
and the current best measurement \(d_n = (0.0 \pm 1.1) \times 10^{-26} e \, {\textrm{cm}} \) [29] we get the following \(95\%\) CL constraintFootnote 2 at \(\mu =2\, {\textrm{GeV}}\)
All in all, in this scenario we can relate the D parameter to the strongly constrained imaginary part of \(C_{1LR}\):
This implies that \(|D| < 10^{-5}\) generically, which is below the experimental sensitivity in the near future. A larger D parameter can be achieved if one allows for some fine-tuning between different contributions to \(d_n\). For example, one can arrange for a partial cancellation between the contributions proportional to \({{\textrm{Im}}} \,C_{1LR}\) and those proportional to the QCD \(\theta \) parameter [7].
Another option is to generate \(\epsilon _R\) from the dimension-8 operator
where \(l = (\nu ,e)\) is the 1st generation lepton doublet, and \({\tilde{l}}_a \equiv \epsilon ^{ab} l_b\). Once the Higgs field acquires VEV, it generates the \(({\bar{e}} {\bar{\sigma }}_\mu \nu ) (\bar{u}^c \sigma ^\mu {\bar{d}}^c)\) operator from Eq. (2.5) with the Wilson coefficient
The D parameter depends on the dimension-8 \(\nu \)SMEFT Wilson coefficient as
The advantage of generating \(\epsilon _R\) via the dimension-8 operator in Eq. (2.17) is that the 4-quark operator in Eq. (2.13) is not generated at tree level. It is however generated at one loop in the EFT, and it is quadratically divergent. The divergence means that the associated contribution to the EDM is not calculable within the EFT.Footnote 3 Instead, the result depends on the UV completion. Nevertheless, one can estimate
where \(\Lambda \) is the mass scale of the BSM particles that generate the operator in Eq. (2.17) and regularize the quadratic divergence. The D parameter can then be estimated as
A D parameter of order \(10^{-4}\) can be obtained, but only when the BSM particles are near the electroweak scale. Therefore, in this scenario it is vital to discuss experimental constraints on the possible UV completions, as the new particles may be within the reach of the LHC. We will discuss this issue later in this paper in the context of leptoquark UV completions. As soon as the new particles are far above the TeV scale, the operator in Eq. (2.19) again leads to the D parameter being suppressed to a currently unobservable level.
Scenario II. We move now to the situation where the D parameter is generated via the \({{\textrm{Im}}} \,[\epsilon _S \epsilon _T^*]\) term in Eq. (2.8), that is via the scalar and tensor interactions with left-handed neutrinos. The following operators in the \(\nu \)SMEFT induce these Wilson coefficients below the electroweak scale:
Above q is the 1st generation quark doublet field. We work in the down-type basis here \(q = (V_{ud}^* u + V_{cd}^* c + V_{td}^* t,d)\). Matching this at tree level to the \(\nu \)WEFT Lagrangian in Eq. (2.5) we get
The contribution to the D parameter is then
In order to generate the D parameter in this scenario one needs to induce the tensor Wilson coefficient \(C_{lequ}^{(3)}\) simultaneously with and with a different phase than \(C_{lequ}^{(1)}\) and/or \(C_{ledq}\). As we will discuss later on, this is possible e.g. in leptoquark models. However, this scenario faces a disastrous problem already at the EFT level.
The point is that the operators in Eq. (2.22), in addition to the charged currents contributing to beta decays, also induce the neutral current interactions:
An imaginary part in any of the Wilson coefficients would induce EDMs in electron, nucleons, nuclei and atoms, which are very strongly constrained by current bounds. Using the theoretical expressions from Refs. [30,31,32], the EDM measurement using the ThO molecule [33] we find the constraints
at \(95\%\) CL. This constrains the imaginary parts of \(\epsilon _S\) and \(\epsilon _T\) to \(O(10^{-10})\) level. Since the real parts are constrained at the \(C(10^{-3})\) level [10], one concludes that in this scenario
It is safe to state that, in this scenario, BSM contributions to the D parameter will never be experimentally observed.
Scenario III. New limiting factors arise when the D parameter is generated via the scalar and tensor interactions involving right-handed neutrinos, cf. the third term in Eq. (2.8). The \(\nu \)SMEFT operators relevant for this scenario are
Matching this to the quark-level Lagrangian in Eq. (2.5) we get
and the D-parameter expressed by \({\nu {\textrm{SMEFT}}}\) Wilson coefficients reads
The main problem is that, as can be seen from Eq. (2.29), in this scenario \({\tilde{\epsilon }}_P\) is generated together with \({\tilde{\epsilon }}_S\) and with the same order of magnitude. The former is strongly constrained by pion decay due to the chiral enhancement of the pseudoscalar contribution by the large factor \(m_\pi ^2/m_e(m_u+m_d)\). The measurement \({\Gamma (\pi \rightarrow e \nu ) \over \Gamma (\pi \rightarrow \mu \nu )} = 1.2327(23) \times 10^{-4}\) [11] translates to \(|{\tilde{\epsilon }}_P| < 1.0 \times 10^{-5}\) at 95% CL. This leads to the suppression of the D parameter by the factor of \(\mathcal {O}(10^{-5})\), unless \(\tilde{\epsilon }_S \sim \tilde{\epsilon }_P\) is avoided via fine-tuning or savvy model building.
Another set of constraints arises due to the neutral currents predicted by Eq. (2.28):
The first two terms above contribute to neutrino masses after QCD phase transition. Naturalness then dictates \(\Lambda _{\textrm{QCD}}^3 (C_{l\nu qd}^{(1)} + V_{ud} C_{l\nu uq}) \lesssim 0.1\) eV, unless there exists some mechanism ensuring cancellation of this contribution against that from the usual Yukawa coupling of the neutrinos. This translates to \(|\tilde{\epsilon }_S| \lesssim 10^{-3}\). The last term induces the neutrino magnetic moment \(\mu _\nu \sim \Lambda _1 {\textrm{Re}} \,C_{l\nu qd}^{(3)}\), where \(\Lambda _1 \sim 10\) MeV [31]. Given the experimental constraint \(\mu _\nu \lesssim 3 \times 10^{-11} \mu _B\) [34, 35], where \(\mu _B\) is the Bohr magneton, one obtains \({\textrm{Re}} \,{\tilde{\epsilon }}_T \lesssim 0.1\). Similar constraint, \(|{\tilde{\epsilon }}_T| \lesssim 0.1\), can be obtained from the global fit to nuclear beta decay [10].
All in all, the D parameter in this scenario can be written as
and thus \(|D| \lesssim 10^{-6}\) in the absence of fine-tuning. Pushing D to the observable level requires a similar level of fine-tuning as in scenario I where it appears through \(\epsilon _R\).
Scenario IV. We finish our EFT exploration by discussing a set-up where the D parameter is generated via the last term in Eq. (2.8) proportional to \({{\textrm{Im}}} \,[{\tilde{\epsilon }}_L {\tilde{\epsilon }}_R^*]\) Consider the following dimension-6 \(\nu \)SMEFT operators:
The first term maps directly to \({\tilde{\epsilon }}_R\). The second induces, after electroweak symmetry breaking, the non-standard W boson interactions right-handed leptons:
Integrating out the W boson one obtains
At the end of the day, the tree-level matching between the operators in Eq. (2.33) and the \(\nu \)SMEFT Wilson coefficients reads
In this scenario, the D-parameter expressed by \(\nu \)SMEFT Wilson coefficients reads
which is once again \(\mathcal {O}(\Lambda ^{-4})\). An important difference with the other scenario with right-handed neutrinos is that the constraints on \({\tilde{\epsilon }}_L\) and \({\tilde{\epsilon }}_R\), or on their \(\nu \)SMEFT counterparts \(C_{\phi e \nu }\) and \(C_{e \nu u d}\) are much milder. In particular, the LEP-2 constraint on W decay \(\textrm{Br}(W \rightarrow e \nu ) = 0.1071(16)\) [36] translates to \(|{\tilde{\epsilon }}_L| \le 0.14\) at 95% CL. On the other hand, \({\tilde{\epsilon }}_R\) can be constrained \(\ell +\)MET searches at the LHC, like the one performed recently by the CMS collaboration [37]. Although the CMS analysis does not consider the 4-fermion operator in Eq. (2.33), we can get an idea about the order of magnitude of the constraint by reinterpreting their limit on sequential \(W'\): \(m_{W'} \gtrsim 5.4\) TeV in the \(e \nu \) decay channel. Integrating out the sequential \(W'\) leads to the 4-fermion operator \(({\bar{u}} {\bar{\sigma }}^\mu d)({\bar{e}} {\bar{\sigma }}_\mu \nu )\) corresponding to \(\epsilon _L = {m_W^2\over m_{W'}^2}\), thus \(|\epsilon _L| \le 0.015\). Since the operator \((e^c \sigma ^\mu {\bar{\nu }}^c)(u^c \sigma _\mu {\bar{d}}^c)\), unlike the one above, does not interfere with the SM amplitudes, we do not expect it to be more strongly constrained, hence \(|{\tilde{\epsilon }}_R| \lesssim \mathcal {O}(0.01)\) is a reasonable estimate. All in all \(|{\tilde{\epsilon }}_{L}| |{\tilde{\epsilon }}_{R}| \sim 10^{-3}\) is consistent with the existing bounds. However, once again there are stronger constraints on the imaginary part of \({\tilde{\epsilon }}_L {\tilde{\epsilon }}_R^*\) due to EDMs. When both operators in Eq. (2.33) are present simultaneously, the 4-quark operators in Eq. (2.13) is generated at one loop. While the relevant diagram is quadratically divergent, and thus the contribution to EDM is not calculable within the EFT, one can estimate
Much as in scenario I, the phase of this operator is correlated with the one responsible for the D parameter, which can be written as
Therefore |D| can be \(\mathcal {O}(10^{-4})\) only if new physics is at the electroweak scale, and is suppressed when \(\Lambda \gg v\). A word of caution is that this conclusion is based on the naive dimensional estimate in Eq. (2.38), and should be verified for specific UV completions in which the EDM contribution is actually calculable.
We close this discussion by mentioning one more possibility for realizing this scenario. The WEFT parameter \({\tilde{\epsilon }}_L\) can be generated from the dimension-8 operator
instead from the dimension-6 operator in Eq. (2.33) proportional to \(C_{\phi e \nu }\). This leads to
and the D parameter reads
This is \(\mathcal {O}(\Lambda ^{-6})\), therefore it is even more strongly suppressed than in other scenarios. The reason we consider this option is that \(C_{\phi e \nu }\) cannot be generated from models with only leptoquarks and right-handed neutrinos as BSM particles, whereas \({\tilde{C}}_8\) can. We will consider one such leptoquark model in Sect. 3. At the EFT level, the dangerous \(C_{1LR}\) Wilson coefficient is still generated with the quadratically divergent coefficient: \(C_{1LR} \sim {v^2 \Lambda ^2 \over 4\pi ^2} C_{e \nu u d} {\tilde{C}}_8^*\). Consequently, the correlation between the D parameter and the 1-loop-generated \(C_{1LR}\) remains the same as in Eq. (2.39).
2.4 Summary of EFT analysis
To wrap up our EFT discussion, working within the \(\nu \)SMEFT extension of the SM, we have classified the scenarios leading to BSM contributions to the D parameter. A concise summary is given in Table 2, where we list the \(\nu \)SMEFT operators above the electroweak scale and the \(\nu \)WEFT parameters below the electroweak scale that define each scenario. We also give the maximum magnitude of the BSM D parameter in each scenario, based on purely EFT arguments.
We have identified three interesting scenarios where the D parameter may be at the currently observable level of \(\mathcal {O}(10^{-4})\) without conflicting other experimental data and without fine-tuned cancellations between different EFT Wilson coefficients:
-
1.
Scenario Ib, where the D parameter is generated via the \({{\textrm{Im}}} \,\epsilon _R\) term in Eq. (2.8), and \(\epsilon _R\) descends from the dimension-8 operator \(({\bar{l}} H {\bar{\sigma }}_\mu H {\tilde{l}}) (u^c \sigma ^\mu {\bar{d}}^c)\) in the \(\nu \)SMEFT.
-
2.
Scenario IVa, where the D parameter is generated via the \({{\textrm{Im}}} \,[{\tilde{\epsilon }}_R {\tilde{\epsilon }}_L^*] \) term in Eq. (2.8), and \({\tilde{\epsilon }}_X\) descend from the dimension-6 operators \((e^c \sigma ^\mu {\bar{\nu }}^c)(u^c \sigma _\mu {\bar{d}}^c)\) and \(H^\dagger D_\mu H^\dagger (e^c \sigma ^\mu {\bar{\nu }}^c)\) in the \(\nu \)SMEFT.
-
3.
Scenario IVb, similar to the above, except that the dimension-6 operator \(H^\dagger D_\mu H^\dagger (e^c \sigma ^\mu {\bar{\nu }}^c)\) is replaced by the dimension-8 one \((e^c \sigma ^\mu {\bar{\nu }}^c) ({\bar{q}} H^\dagger \sigma _\mu H^\dagger q)\).
In these scenarios, the D parameter of order \(10^{-4}\) is generically consistent with other experimental bounds, assuming that the new BSM particles have masses close to the electroweak scale. Of course, the corollary is that those models that generate \(D \sim O(10^{-4} - 10^{-5})\) will eventually face constraints from direct searches at the LHC, which have to be studied for each concrete UV completion separately. It should be stressed that the maximum D estimates in these scenarios rely on dimensional estimates of loop contributions to EDMs that are quadratically divergent, and thus not calculable within the EFT. They should be verified for specific UV completions in which EDMs are calculable. We will discuss later on how our estimates compare to one-loop calculations in leptoquark models.
Two more scenarios can lead to an \(\mathcal {O}(10^{-4})\) D parameter at the cost of a percent-level fine tuning:
-
1.
Scenario Ia, where the D parameter is generated via the \({{\textrm{Im}}} \,\epsilon _R\) term in Eq. (2.8), and \(\epsilon _R\) descends from the dimension-6 operator \({\tilde{H}}^\dagger D_\mu H (u^c \sigma ^\mu {\bar{d}}^c)\).
-
2.
Scenario III, where the D parameter is generated via the \({{\textrm{Im}}} \,[{\tilde{\epsilon }}_T {\tilde{\epsilon }}_S^*] \) term in Eq. (2.8), and \({\tilde{\epsilon }}_X\) descend from the scalar dimension-6 operators \(({\bar{l}} {\bar{\nu }}^c)( {\bar{q}} {\bar{d}}^c )\) and/or \(({\bar{l}} {\bar{\nu }}^c) (u^c q)\) together with the tensor one \(({\bar{l}} {\bar{\sigma }}^{\mu \nu } {\bar{\nu }}^c)({\bar{q}} {\bar{\sigma }}_{\mu \nu } {\bar{d}}^c)\).
Finally, in Scenario II, where the D parameter is generated via the \({{\textrm{Im}}} \,[\epsilon _T \epsilon _S^*]\) term in Eq. (2.8), an enormous fine-tuning would be needed to push the D parameter to observable levels.
In the next section we will discuss which of these scenarios can arise in the BSM models with leptoquarks.
3 D parameter in CP-violating models with leptoquarks
The general interactions of leptoquarks with the SM matter are summarized in Appendix A. In this section we discuss concrete BSM model containing one or two relatively light leptoquarks contributing to the D parameter. We will determine how large can the D parameter be taking into account the existing constraints from high- and low-energy experiments (see e.g. [38,39,40]).
3.1 \(S_1\)–\(R_2\)
We consider a model with two scalar leptoquarks \(S_1\) and \(R_2\) in the standard nomenclature reviewed in Appendix A. Their possible Yukawa interactions with the SM fermions are summarized in Eq. (A.1). For the sake of this subsection we set the \(S_1\) coupling to right-handed neutrinos to zero, \(y_{S d \nu } = 0\), as it is not relevant for the D parameter calculation when \({\tilde{R}}_2\) is absent. The parameter space is therefore characterized by four complex Yukawa couplings defined in Eq. (A.2): \(y_{Sue}\), \(y_{Sql}\), \(y_{Rqe}\), \(y_{Rul}\), and two masses \(M_{S_1}\) and \(M_{R_2}\). This model is a realization of the scenario II where the D parameter is generated through the \(C_{lequ}^{(1),(3)}\) (\(\nu \))SMEFT Wilson coefficients. Using the matching in Eq. (A.4) the D parameter is expressed by the BSM parameters as
Clearly, all the four Yukawa couplings have to be non-zero to generate the D parameter, and at least one of them should have an imaginary part. However, such imaginary parts are prohibitively constrained by EDMs, as discussed around Eq. (2.26). The imaginary parts of the leptoquark Yukawa couplings are constrained by EDM measurements in the ThO molecule as
Assuming for example that the imaginary part resides in the \(S_1\) interactions, we have \(|D| \lesssim 10^{-11} \kappa _D {y_{R q e} y_{R u l} v^2 \over M_{R_2}^2 }\). Furthermore, the masses and Yukawa’s of \(R_2\) are subject to constraints from the LHC \(pp \rightarrow e^+ e^-\) process, \({y_{R q e} y_{R u l} v^2 \over M_{R_2}^2 } \lesssim 10^{-3}\). We conclude that \(|D| \lesssim 10^{-14}\) in the \(S_1\)–\(R_2\) model, which is of course is too small to ever be observed.
Models with the \(U_1\)–\(S_1\), \(U_1\)–\(R_2\), \(V_2\)–\(S_1\), or \(V_2\)–\(R_2\) leptoquark pair can also lead to scenario II, with exactly the same problem due to the EDMs.
3.2 \(S_1\)-\({\tilde{R}}_2\)
We move to a model with two scalar leptoquarks: \(S_1\) and \({\tilde{R}}_2\). Their quantum numbers are given in Table 3, and their possible Yukawa interactions with the SM fermions are collected in Eq. (A.2). In this model contributions to the D parameter will enter via interactions with right-handed neutrinos, therefore this time we assume \(y_{S d \nu }\) is non-zero. On the other hand, we set \(y_{Sue} = 0\), as this coupling is not relevant for the discussion of the D parameter in this model (and only would make precision constraints more stringent). The parameter space is characterized by four complex Yukawa couplings defined in Eq. (A.2): \(y_{Sd\nu }\), \(y_{Sql}\), \(y_{Rq\nu }\), \(y_{Rdl}\), and two masses \(M_{S_1}\) and \(M_{{\tilde{R}}_2}\). This model is a realization of the scenario III where the D parameter is generated through the \(C_{l\nu q d}^{(1),(3)}\) \(\nu \)SMEFT Wilson coefficients. Using the matching in Eq. (A.4) the D parameter is expressed by the BSM parameters as
The magnitude of Yukawa couplings entering this formula are constrained by precision measurements of CP conserving quantities, notably by pion decay. Indeed, in this model the dangerous Wilson coefficient \({\tilde{\epsilon }}_P\) is generated in the WEFT below the electroweak scale. At tree level and ignoring the (nearly identical for \(\tilde{\epsilon }_S\) and \(\tilde{\epsilon }_P\)) running effects in Eq. (2.5) one finds
Thus,
The pion decay bound \(|{\tilde{\epsilon }}_P| < 1.0 \times 10^{-5}\) implies \(|D| < 10^{-5}\) for order one Yukawa couplings and leptoquark masses at the electroweak scale. In this model there are no free parameters that could be used to fine-tune away the pion decay constraints on the D parameter: if \({\tilde{\epsilon }}_P\) is fine-tuned to vanish, so does the D parameter. Taking into account the LHC constraints, the leptoquark contributions to the D parameter are further suppressed. The constraints from the \(pp \rightarrow e^+ e^-\) Drell–Yan process imply \({|y_{S q l }|^2 v^2 \over M_{S_1}^2}, { v^2 |y_{R d l}|^2 \over M_{{\tilde{R}}_2}^2 } \lesssim 10^{-3}\). While the constraints from the \(pp \rightarrow e^+ \nu \) are weaker, \({|y_{S d \nu }|^2 v^2 \over M_{S_1}^2}, { v^2 |y_{R q \nu }|^2 \over M_{{\tilde{R}}_2}^2 } \lesssim 10^{-1}\), overall \(|D| \lesssim 10^{-7}\). This is too small to be observable in any foreseeable future.
Models with the \(U_1\)–\(S_1\), \(U_1\)–\({\tilde{R}}_2\), \({\tilde{V}}_2\)–\(S_1\), or \({\tilde{V}}_2\)–\({\tilde{R}}_2\) leptoquark pair can also lead to scenario III. They have very similar properties as the \(S_1\)–\({\tilde{R}}_2\) model, and only differ by order one factors regarding the constraints. In models with at least three leptoquarks, for example \(U_1\)–\(S_1\)–\({\tilde{R}}_2\), there exists a possibility to fine tune away the contributions to \({\tilde{\epsilon }}_P\) and somewhat alleviate the problem of the pion decay constraints.
3.3 \(R_2\)–\({\tilde{R}}_2\)
We turn to the model with one \(R_2\) and \({\tilde{R}}_2\), which was already discussed in Refs. [4, 5], and leads to scenario Ib in the nomenclature of Table 2. In order to generate the D parameter we need the Yukawa couplings \(y_{Rul}\) and \( y_{Rdl}\) in Eq. (A.2) (and also the quartic mixing in Eq. (A.5)) to be non-zero. On the other hand, in this subsection we set \(y_{Rqe} = y_{Rq\nu } = 0\) for simplicity. The D parameter is given by
We will assume that the phase of \(\lambda _{RR} y_{Rul} {\bar{y}}_{R d l}\) is maximal. In this case, the possibility of generating a large D parameter becomes severely constrained when combining existing experimental constraints. We begin with EDMs. In this model, the 4-quark operator in Eq. (2.13) is generated by leptoquark loops [5] with the same phase as the one entering the D parameter. Unlike in the EFT calculation discussed in Sect. 2, the loop is finite and therefore calculable without ambiguities, since the model is renormalizable. For leptoquark masses sufficiently larger than the electroweak scale one finds [5]
This is always a good approximation for leptoquarks satisfying the direct search constraints (see below). Note that \(\lim _{x \rightarrow y} \log (x/y)/(x-y) = 1/y\). We can rewrite the D parameter as
The most favorable situation for the D parameter corresponds to the limit \(M_{{\tilde{R}}_2}^2 = M_{R_2}^2 \equiv M_{\textrm{LQ}}^2\). We thus have at the inequality
The LHC constraints from leptoquark pair production leading to the qqll final state [41] imply \(M_{R_2,{\tilde{R}}_2} \gtrsim 1.4\) TeV [42], independently to a large extent of the value of the Yukawa couplings. Thus \(v^2/M_{LQ}^2 \lesssim 3 \times 10^{-2}\) and we arrive at the bound
in the entire phenomenologically allowed parameter space of the \(R_2\)–\({\tilde{R}}_2\) model. For a given Yukawa coupling, further constraints can be derived using the leptoquark contributions to the Drell–Yan process \(pp \rightarrow e^+ e^-\). Here we will work in the limit where \(M_{R_2,{\tilde{R}}_2} \gg 1\) TeV such that the Drell–Yan process can be accurately described within SMEFT. As shown in Eqs. (A.9) and (A.10), integrating out the leptoquarks generates the effective 4-fermion operators
which contribute to \(pp \rightarrow e^+ e^-\). We use the bounds from the analysis of Ref. [43] based on the CMS and ATLAS \(e^+ e^-\) pair production results [44, 45]. The Drell–Yan, pair production, and EDM constraints together are shown in Fig. 1 for two particular choices of the Yukawa couplings and the scalar mixing \(\lambda _{RR}\). For large Yukawas, the EDM bounds push the leptoquark mass scale into the multi-TeV regime, leading to a stronger suppression of the D parameter than the maximum value on Eq. (3.10). In this regime, the Drell–Yan bounds are stronger than the pair production ones, but always weaker than the EDM ones. Very small Yukawas also suppress the D parameter, and in this case the limit is set by the direct bounds on leptoquark masses from pair production (which does not depend on \(y_{Rul}\) and \(y_{Rdl}\)). The D parameter is maximized when the EDM and direct bounds coincide, which happens for \(|y_{Rul}| \approx |y_{R d l}| \approx 0.2\). For these sweet-spot values of the Yukawas, the Drell–Yan bounds happen to be somewhat weaker than the pair production ones, due to a small \(\sim 2\sigma \) excess in the former data. All in all, we find that maximum \(|D| \approx 8 \times 10^{-6}\) is possible for \({}^{23}\)Mg. This is still below the sensitivity of the next generation experiments, but it could be a realistic goalpost in the future.
3.4 \(R_2\)–\({\tilde{R}}_2\)–\(S_1\)
The \(R_2\)–\({\tilde{R}}_2\)–\(S_1\) model considered in this subsection was discussed in Ref. [5], and it realizes scenario IVb in the nomenclature of Table 2. While the dimension-6 \(\nu \)SMEFT operator \(H^\dagger D_\mu H^\dagger e^c \sigma _\mu {\bar{\nu }}^c\) cannot be generated at tree level in models where the leptoquarks are the only exotic particles (for that one would have to extend the gauge symmetry of the SM and introduce the associated gauge bosons), the dimension-8 \(\nu \)SMEFT operator \(e^c \sigma _\mu {\bar{\nu }}^c {\bar{q}} {\tilde{H}} \sigma _\mu H^\dagger q\) can be generated by the \(R_2\)–\({\tilde{R}}_2\) pair mixing after electroweak symmetry breaking. In this subsection we set the Yukawa couplings \(y_{Rul}=y_{Rdl}=0\) in Eq. (A.2), as they will not play any role in generating D. On the other hand, this time we assume that \(y_{Rqe}\) and \(y_{Rq\nu }\) are non-zero. Integrating out the \(R_2\)-\({\tilde{R}}_2\) pair in the presence of the scalar mixing in Eq. (A.5) generates the \(e^c \sigma _\mu {\bar{\nu }}^c {\bar{q}} {\tilde{H}} \sigma _\mu H^\dagger q\) operator with the Wilson coefficient
In scenario IV, one also has to generate the Wilson coefficient \(C_{e \nu u d}\) of the dimension-6 operator \(e^c \sigma _\mu {\bar{\nu }}^c u^c \sigma _\mu {\bar{d}}^c \). To this end we introduce in addition the \(S_1\) leptoquark, and assume its Yukawa couplings \(y_{Sue}\) and \(y_{Sd\nu }\) in Eq. (A.2) are non-zero. In this subsection we set \(y_{Sql} =0\) for simplicity. From Eq. (A.4) one then has
Plugging the above Wilson coefficients into Eq. (2.42) one finds the D parameter
In this scenario the D parameter is suppressed by six powers of leptoquark masses, which then have to be very close to the electroweak scale to obtain a sizable magnitude of D. Therefore one expects that a large D will be in tension with direct LHC searches. The LHC constraints from leptoquark pair production imply \(M_{R_2,{\tilde{R}}_2,S_1} \gtrsim 1.4\) TeV [42], independently to a large extent of the value of the Yukawa couplings. This alone brings a suppression factor of \(\mathcal {O}(10^{-5})\), which would have to be balanced by large Yukawas and/or scalar mixing. Further constraints come from EDMs generated at one loop. In the limit where \(M_{R_2} = M_{{\tilde{R}}_2}=M_{S_1} \equiv M_{\textrm{LQ}}\) one generates the 4-quark operator in Eq. (2.13) with the Wilson coefficient [5]
Therefore the D parameter can be recast as
The above is an inequality because hierarchies between the leptoquark masses lead to a suppression of D with respect to \({{\textrm{Im}}} \,C_{1LR}\). Given the EDM constraints, the maximum value of the D parameter is 4 times larger than in the model of the previous subsection, cf. Eq. (3.9). Taking into account the direct LHC constraints on leptoquarks, at face value one can reach \(|D| \approx 2 \times 10^{-5}\). However, as we discuss below, in the realistic parameter space |D| is always smaller. One reason is that the present model also faces constraints from \(pp \rightarrow e^+ e^-\) Drell–Yan production. For \(M_{\textrm{LQ}} \gg v\) this is described by the effective operators
In Fig. 2 we contrast the maximum value of D parameter in this model with the direct, Drell–Yan, and EDM constraints. For order one \(y_{S u e}\) and \(y_{R q e}\), the LHC process \(pp \rightarrow e^+ e^-\) provides the strongest constraint, pushing the leptoquark mass scale above 4 TeV, which leads to a prohibitive suppression of D. A larger D can be achieved in the regime where \(y_{S u e}\) and \(y_{R q e}\) are somewhat suppressed while \(y_{S d \nu }\) and \(y_{R q \nu }\) are enhanced, in which case the direct LHC constraints from leptoquark pair production dominate. Still, one can achieve \(|D| \sim 3 \times 10^{-6}\) at best. In order to get to the values suggested by Eq. (3.16) one would have to further increase \(y_{S d \nu } y_{R q \nu }\). This would not only be at odds with perturbativity, but would also be subject to bounds from \(pp \rightarrow e^\pm nu\) production at the LHC, \(|y_{S d \nu }|^2/M_{\textrm{LQ}}^2, |y_{R q \nu }|^2/M_{\textrm{LQ}}^2 \lesssim 10^{-1}\). We conclude that the \(R_2\)–\({\tilde{R}}_2\)–\(S_1\) model cannot lead to a larger D parameter than the \(R_2\)–\({\tilde{R}}_2\) one, in spite of more favorable EDM constraints. The problem is rooted in the fact that \(D \sim \mathcal {O}(M_{\textrm{LQ}}^{-6})\) in the former, and is thus strongly suppressed given the LHC constraints. It is reasonable to conjecture that any BSM model with the new physics scale \(\Lambda \) where \(D \sim \mathcal {O}(\Lambda ^{-6})\) will suffer from similar bounds.Footnote 4
4 CP-conserving new physics via the D parameter?
We have seen in the previous sections that imaginary parts of the Wilson coefficients \(C_X^\pm \), of the magnitude that could lead to a potentially observable D parameter, are strongly constrained by EDMs. Therefore it is interesting to note that the one-loop electromagnetic corrections to the beta decay amplitude also contribute imaginary parts to the amplitude when some particle in the loop goes on shell. As originally shown by Jackson, Treiman and Wyld in Ref. [8], these imaginary parts contribute to the D parameter and other correlation coefficients in beta decay. But they do not contribute to EDMs (since electromagnetic interactions are CP-conserving) and are thus less constrained. In this section we argue that the scenario where precision measurements of the D parameter uncover CP-conserving new physics is perhaps more realistic than observing CP violation in this kind of experiments.
At one loop, the chief electromagnetic effect on the beta decay amplitude arises due to photon exchange between the daughter nucleus and the beta particle. When these last two particles in the loop are on shell the amplitude develops an imaginary part which, via unitarity, is fully determined by tree level amplitudes. The leading term in the non-relativistic expansion of that contribution is proportional to \(\Delta _Z \equiv { m_e \over p_e} Z_{{\mathcal {N}}'} \alpha \), where \(Z_{{\mathcal {N}}'}\) is the charge of the daughter nucleus, \(\alpha \) is the fine-structure constant, \(m_e\) is the electron mass, and \(p_e\) is the momentum of the outgoing \(\beta \) particle. In fact, at the leading order in \(1/m_N\), the Coulomb unitarity correctionsFootnote 5 to any correlation coefficient can be effectively described by the following transformation of the Wilson coefficients in the leading order expression:
where the ± sign in front of \(\Delta _Z\) refers to the \(\beta ^\mp \) transitions. See Appendix B for a derivation of Eq. (4.1). Inserting the shift Eq. (4.1) into Eq. (2.4), the expression for the D parameter is generalized as \(D = D_{\textrm{LO}} + D_{\textrm{Coulomb}}\), where \(D_{\textrm{LO}}\) is given by the expression in Eq. (2.4), and the Coulomb correction is [8]
The important point is that \(D_{\textrm{Coulomb}}\) can be non-zero even for real Wilson coefficients, that is in the absence of CP violation in the nucleon-level EFT. Note that \(D_{\textrm{Coulomb}}\) is very small in the SMFootnote 6 where \(C_{S}^{-}=C_{T}^{\pm }=0\) and \(C_S^+\) is suppressed by both \(m_e/m_p \sim 10^{-3}\) and isospin breaking, leading to the estimate \(v^2 C_{S, \mathrm SM}^+ \lesssim 10^{-5}\). On the other hand, in a general CP-conserving BSM set-up \(C_{S,T}^{\pm }\) can be non-zero. The current model independent constraints imply \(v^2 {\textrm{Re}} \,C_{S,T}^+ \lesssim 10^{-3}\), while \(v^2 {\textrm{Re}} \,C_{X}^- \lesssim 10^{-1}\) [10]. The additional suppression factor of \(Z_{{\mathcal {N}}'} \alpha \) is not a very small number, especially for beta decays with \(Z_{{\mathcal {N}}'}\gtrsim 10\). All in all, with completely real Wilson coefficients, it is possible to arrange for \(\mathcal {O}(10^{-5})\) BSM contributions to the D parameter in heavier nuclei, or even \(\mathcal {O}(10^{-4})\) when right-handed neutrinos are present in the low-energy EFT. Taking into account that a sensitivity of \(\mathcal {O}(10^{-4})\) is expected in the near future [3], CP-conserving new physics is a promising target for experiments measuring D.
Translating Eq. (4.2) to the quark-level EFT parameters one finds
where \(\kappa _D\) is defined in Eq. (2.8), and we neglected \(\mathcal {O}(\epsilon _X^2)\) (but not \(\mathcal {O}({\tilde{\epsilon }}_X^2)\)) terms. As a reference, let us take \({}^{23}\)Mg, with \(Z_{{\mathcal {N}}'}=11\), \(\kappa _{D}\approx -1.3\) and the averaged \(\big \langle \frac{m_e}{p_e} \big \rangle \approx 0.35\). One finds
Assuming the absence of CP violation, the future sensitivity of \(\Delta D^{23{\textrm{Mg}}}\sim 10^{-5}\) would translate into a sensitivity on \(\epsilon _{S}\) and \(\epsilon _{T}\) of about \(\sim 10^{-3}\).Footnote 7 This is the same order of magnitude as the sensitivity offered by the currently most precise CP-even probes in \(\beta \) decays: superallowed \(0^+ \rightarrow 0^+\) and neutron decays [10]. We illustrate this point in Fig. 3, where hypothetical constraints on \(\epsilon _S\) and \(\epsilon _T\) from future measurement of \(D^{23{\textrm{Mg}}}\) are compared to the existing ones from the combination of low-energy precision measurements performed in Ref. [50]. The conclusion is that a measurement of D with an uncertainty better than \(10^{-4}\) would already affect the current constraints. One important point is that the sensitivity of D to the real part of \(\epsilon _S\) and \(\epsilon _T\) is linear, and that scales as \(1/M^2\) in the new physics scale M. This is in contrast to most CP-violating scenarios considered earlier, where the sensitivity scaled as \(1/M^4\), which lead to strong tension with direct LHC bounds. If right-handed neutrinos are present in the low-energy EFT, a potential sensitivity of \(\Delta D^{23{\textrm{Mg}}}\sim 10^{-5}\) would constrain the products of two \(\tilde{\epsilon }_X\) at the \(10^{-3}\) level. This sensitivity is highly competitive with the most precise CP even bounds from \(\beta \) decays, which give \(|\tilde{\epsilon }_X|\lesssim 0.1\) [10].
Moving upwards in our EFT ladder, if we assume the validity of the SMEFT at the TeV energies, the potential bound on \(\epsilon _S\) and \(\epsilon _T\) translates into a bound on the \(C_{lequ}^{(1)}\), \(C_{lequ}^{(3)}\), and \(C_{ledq}\) Wilson coefficients in Eq. (2.22). Assuming that new physics generating these Wilson coefficients is above the LHC scale, this constraint would become complementary to the one obtained from LHC observables. Analogously, if the \(\nu \)SMEFT is the valid EFT at the TeV energies, the potential D parameter bounds on \(\tilde{\epsilon }_X\) translates into bounds on \(C_{e \nu u d}^{(1)}\), \(C_{e \nu u d}^{(3)}\), \(C_{l\nu u q}\), and \(C_{e\nu u d}\) in Eqs. (2.28) and (2.33).
To compare the sensitivity of the D parameter and LHC searches in a concrete BSM scenario, we turn to a particular leptoquark model. We consider the following (somewhat contrived) model with the \(S_1\) and \(R_2\) with the common mass \(M_{\textrm{LQ}}\) and the cubic interactions
where \(y_{1,2}\) are real. The model is designed to only generate the tensor but no scalar or pseudoscalar charged current interactions at the high scale \(M_{\textrm{LQ}}\). Indeed, using Eq. (A.4) one finds that integrating out the leptoquarks leads to, among others, the SMEFT Wilson coefficients \(C_{lequ}^{(1)} = C_{ledq} = 0\) and \(C_{lequ}^{(3)}= - {y_1 y_2 \over 4 M_{\textrm{LQ}}^2 }\). Without taking into account RG running this would translate to \(\epsilon _S= \epsilon _P= 0\) and \(\epsilon _T = {y_1 y_2 v^2 \over 2 V_{ud} M_{\textrm{LQ}}^2}\) in the EFT below the electroweak scale. RG running is however relevant, because it generates \(\epsilon _P\). The future bound on the D parameter in \({}^{23}\)Mg beta decays would be another probe of this CP-conserving scenario, in addition to the LHC and low-energy precision measurements. In Fig. 4 we illustrate the sensitivity of the different probes. A measurement of the D parameter in \({}^{23}\)Mg with the uncertainty of \(10^{-5}\) would provide a competitive probe of the parameters of the model compared to the current constraints from the LHC \(pp \rightarrow e^+ e^-\) Drell–Yan data. In this analysis we assume \(M_{LQ} \gg 1\) TeV, such that the effects of leptoquark on Drell–Yan production can be correctly estimated by dimension-6 operators in the \(\nu \)SMEFT. If the leptoquarks are lighter, say in the 2 TeV ballpark, then the Drell–Yan constraints become actually weaker, further increasing the relevance of the D parameter measurements. On the other hand, the low-energy precision measurements are in this specific scenario much stronger than the LHC or the D parameter. This is because RG running generates non-zero \(\epsilon _P\) at \(\mu \simeq 2\) GeV, which is very strongly constrained by pion decay.Footnote 8
5 Conclusions
In this paper we discussed the prospects to uncover new physics beyond the SM via measurements of the D correlation coefficient in beta decay. The experimental sensitivity is expected to improve to \(\Delta D \sim 10^{-5}\) in the coming decade [3]. This should allow one to measure the small \(D \sim 10^{-4}\) predicted by the SM due final-state electromagnetic interactions between the daughter nucleus and the beta particle. More generally, D probes imaginary parts of Wilson coefficients in the general nucleon-level EFT, which are currently not constrained by other experiments. Therefore, future measurements of the D parameter will not only provide a test of the SM but also add unique information about the EFT for beta decay.
A separate question is: which concrete models of new physics can be discovered or constrained by the D parameter measurements? In principle, new heavy particle with CP-violating interactions may induce complex phases of EFT Wilson coefficients, and thus contribute to D. We argue however that realistic models leading to an observable shift from the SM prediction would have to be severely fine-tuned to avoid simultaneous constraints from other experiments, especially from measurements of electric dipole moments, but also from pion decay and Drell–Yan electron pair production at the LHC. We give a very general, model-independent argument for this assertion, working at the level of an EFT below and above the electroweak scale. We classify the scenarios for generating the D parameters in this EFT and identify the problems with each scenario. The constraints and necessary tunings are also illustrated in concrete BSM settings involving leptoquarks. Our conclusions update, generalize, and strengthen those of Ref. [5] given the experimental progress in the last decade. Since the sensitivity of EDM experiments is expected to improve fast in the coming years, we expect our conclusions to only become stronger as time goes by.
A word of caution is in order. It should be stressed that our results do not exclude in a model-independent way that a signal of CP violation appears in the next generation of experiments measuring the D parameter. Non-trivial relations between parameters of BSM models may arise because of symmetries or by accident, leading to an apparent fine tuning from the low-energy perspective. If one allows for such fine tuning, CP-violating contributions to the D parameter can be significant, even \(\mathcal {O}(10^{-4})\). What we claim is that, if a deviation from the SM prediction is found, the BSM models explaining it via new CP violating phases will necessarily appear fine-tuned or involve an element of baroqueness.
We also discussed the possibility of CP-conserving BSM contributions to the D parameter, reaching more optimistic conclusions. While the D correlation is T-odd, final state interactions at one loop level can provide necessary phases to induce D even in the absence of fundamental CP violation. In particular, the real parts of non-standard scalar and tensor charged currents in the nucleon-level EFT interfere with the electromagnetic Coulomb corrections to beta decay so as to generate D [8]. Even though the scalar and tensor current must be suppressed compared to the standard vector and axial currents [10], their contribution to D arises at the leading order in \(1/m_N\) expansion, unlike the SM one which arise at the next-to-leading order. For this reason, the D parameter may soon become a sensitive probe of CP-conserving non-standard currents. We find that the experimental uncertainty of order \(\Delta D \sim 10^{-5}\) will be enough to compete with other sensitive beta decay probes (superallowed and neutron decays), as well as with the LHC observables.
Data Availability Statement
This manuscript has no associated data or the data will not be deposited. [Authors’ comment: This is a theoretical paper and the authors produced no data while preparing it. The information about the experimental data that we have used is detailed in the text and properly referenced.]
Notes
For \(A>1\) nuclei one may expect further corrections from two-body currents. However the anatomy of direct matching of quark-level EFT nuclear form factors together with CVC relation [16,17,18] indicate that the presented picture and the arising conclusions would not become significantly altered by including these corrections.
Using the information from nuclear EDMs Ref. [7] quotes a slightly stronger constraint \(v^2 |{\textrm{Im}} C_{1LR}| \le 3 \times 10^{-6}\).
Technically within the EFT these contributions are absent in \({\textrm{MS}}\)-like schemes, which preserves the dimensional counting beyond tree level. But then one generically expects that the very same UV interaction that induces the \(D=8\) contribution at tree level will also induce the problematic \(D=6\) one at one-loop level when matching with the EFT.
One could also consider a hybrid \(S_1\)–\(W'\) scenario where, instead of \({\tilde{C}}_8\), one generates \(e^c \sigma _\mu {\bar{\nu }}^c {\bar{q}} {\tilde{H}} \sigma _\mu H^\dagger q\) by integrating out the right-handed W boson. This would realize scenario IVa in the nomenclature of Table 2, in which case \(D \sim \mathcal {O}(\Lambda ^{-4})\). However, direct LHC constraints on new gauge bosons are typically a factor of few stronger than those on leptoquarks, and it is unlikely that this avenue could lead to a significant enhancement of the D parameter.
Let us note that there is an additional Coulomb correction of order \(\alpha \) to the overall amplitude, also included in Ref. [8], which is the well-known Fermi function. This correction is not directly related to this one, which is fully fixed by unitarity, and cannot induce a nonzero D.
The bound on \(\epsilon _S\) is perhaps more interesting from the perspective of the UV completion of the EFT. Once again, this is a consequence of the mixing between \(\epsilon _T\) and \(\epsilon _P\) under renormalization group running. Namely, \(\epsilon _T \sim 10^{-3}\) at the scale \(M_Z\) induces \(\epsilon _P \sim 10^{-5}\) at \(\mu \simeq 2\) GeV [49], at odds with the bound \(|\epsilon _P(2~{\textrm{GeV}})| \lesssim 5 \times 10^{-7}\) from \(\pi ^- \rightarrow e^{-}\bar{\nu }_{e}\). Barring artificial fine tuning between two unrelated effects – the QED running between two renormalization scales and the exact linear combinations of Wilson coefficients generated from new interactions at higher energies – the pion decay bound on \(\epsilon _T(M_Z)\) is stronger than what one can realistically obtain from the D parameter.
The main point of this exercise was to compare the LHC and D parameter sensitivities in a concrete BSM setting. For the record, however, we note that one could avoid the pion constraint by a small adjustment of the leptoquark couplings in Eq. (4.5) so that \(\epsilon _P(2\, {\textrm{GeV}})=0\) after running. Of course, such a fine-tuning seems difficult to motivate from the UV perspective.
In the 4-component Dirac formalism \(u_3 = (x_3,{\bar{y}}_3)^T\), \({\bar{u}}_3 = (y_3,{\bar{x}}_3)\), \(v_4 = (y_4, {\bar{x}}_4)^T\).
References
J.D. Jackson, S.B. Treiman, H.W. Wyld, Possible tests of time reversal invariance in Beta decay. Phys. Rev. 106, 517 (1957)
C.G. Callan, S.B. Treiman, Electromagnetic simulation of T violation in beta decay. Phys. Rev. 162, 1494 (1967)
P. Delahaye et al., The MORA project, in 7th International Conference on Trapped Charged Particles and Fundamental Physics (TCP 2018) Takamatsu, Japan, September 30–October 5, 2018 (2018). arXiv:1812.02970
P. Herczeg, Beta decay beyond the standard model. Prog. Part. Nucl. Phys. 46, 413 (2001)
J. Ng, S. Tulin, D versus d: CP violation in beta decay and electric dipole moments. Phys. Rev. D 85, 033001 (2012). arXiv:1111.0649
B.K. El-Menoufi, M.J. Ramsey-Musolf, C.-Y. Seng, Right-handed neutrinos and T-violating, P-conserving interactions. Phys. Lett. B 765, 62 (2017). arXiv:1605.09060
M.J. Ramsey-Musolf, J.C. Vasquez, Left-right symmetry and electric dipole moments. A global analysis. Phys. Lett. B 815, 136136 (2021). arXiv:2012.02799
J.D. Jackson, S.B. Treiman, H.W. Wyld, Coulomb corrections in allowed beta transitions. Nucl. Phys. 4, 206 (1957)
M. Gonzalez-Alonso, O. Naviliat-Cuncic, N. Severijns, New physics searches in nuclear and neutron \(\beta \) decay. Prog. Part. Nucl. Phys. 104, 165 (2019). arXiv:1803.08732
A. Falkowski, M. González-Alonso, O. Naviliat-Cuncic, Comprehensive analysis of beta decays within and beyond the Standard Model. JHEP 04, 126 (2021). arXiv:2010.13797
Particle Data Group Collaboration, Review of particle physics. PTEP 2020, 083C01 (2020)
P. Delahaye, The MORA experiment, Presentation at ISOL@MYRRHA (2022)
A. Falkowski, M. González-Alonso, A. Palavrić, A. Rodríguez-Sánchez, Constraints on subleading interactions in beta decay Lagrangian. arXiv:2112.07688
U. van Kolck, Effective field theory of nuclear forces. Prog. Part. Nucl. Phys. 43, 337 (1999). arXiv:nucl-th/9902015
T.D. Lee, C.-N. Yang, Question of parity conservation in weak interactions. Phys. Rev. 104, 254 (1956)
R.P. Feynman, M. Gell-Mann, Theory of Fermi interaction. Phys. Rev. 109, 193 (1958)
S. Weinberg, Charge symmetry of weak interactions. Phys. Rev. 112, 1375 (1958)
M. Gonzalez-Alonso, J. Martin Camalich, Isospin breaking in the nucleon mass and the sensitivity of \(\beta \) decays to new physics. Phys. Rev. Lett. 112, 042501 (2014). arXiv:1309.4434
H.K. Dreiner, H.E. Haber, S.P. Martin, Two-component spinor techniques and Feynman rules for quantum field theory and supersymmetry. Phys. Rep. 494, 1 (2010). arXiv:0812.1594
M. Ademollo, R. Gatto, Nonrenormalization theorem for the strangeness violating vector currents. Phys. Rev. Lett. 13, 264 (1964)
Y. Aoki et al., FLAG Rev. 2111, 09849 (2021)
R. Gupta, Y.-C. Jang, B. Yoon, H.-W. Lin, V. Cirigliano, T. Bhattacharya, Isovector charges of the nucleon from 2+1+1-flavor lattice QCD. Phys. Rev. D 98, 034503 (2018). arXiv:1806.09006
C. Chang et al., A per-cent-level determination of the nucleon axial coupling from quantum chromodynamics. Nature 558, 91 (2018). arXiv:1805.12130
A. Walker-Loud et al., Lattice QCD determination of \(g_A\). PoS CD2018, 020 (2020)
Y. Liao, X.-D. Ma, Operators up to dimension seven in standard model effective field theory extended with sterile neutrinos. Phys. Rev. D 96, 015012 (2017). arXiv:1612.04527
H.-L. Li, Z. Ren, M.-L. Xiao, J.-H. Yu, Y.-H. Zheng, Operator bases in effective field theories with sterile neutrinos: d \(\le \) 9. JHEP 11, 003 (2021). arXiv:2105.09329
J.C. Pati, A. Salam, Lepton number as the fourth color. Phys. Rev. D 10, 275 (1974)
S. Alioli, V. Cirigliano, W. Dekens, J. de Vries, E. Mereghetti, Right-handed charged currents in the era of the Large Hadron Collider. JHEP 05, 086 (2017). arXiv:1703.04751
C. Abel et al., Measurement of the permanent electric dipole moment of the neutron. Phys. Rev. Lett. 124, 081803 (2020). arXiv:2001.11966
W. Dekens, J. de Vries, M. Jung, K.K. Vos, The phenomenology of electric dipole moments in models of scalar leptoquarks. JHEP 01, 069 (2019). arXiv:1809.09114
W. Dekens, E.E. Jenkins, A.V. Manohar, P. Stoffer, Non-perturbative effects in \(\mu \rightarrow e \gamma \). JHEP 01, 088 (2019). arXiv:1810.05675
J. Aebischer, W. Dekens, E.E. Jenkins, A.V. Manohar, D. Sengupta, P. Stoffer, Effective field theory interpretation of lepton magnetic and electric dipole moments. JHEP 07, 107 (2021). arXiv:2102.08954
ACME Collaboration, Improved limit on the electric dipole moment of the electron. Nature 562, 355 (2018)
A.G. Beda, V.B. Brudanin, V.G. Egorov, D.V. Medvedev, V.S. Pogosov, E.A. Shevchik et al., Gemma experiment: the results of neutrino magnetic moment search. Phys. Part. Nucl. Lett. 10, 139 (2013)
Borexino Collaboration, Limiting neutrino magnetic moments with Borexino Phase-II solar neutrino data. Phys. Rev. D 96, 091103 (2017). arXiv:1707.09355
ALEPH, DELPHI, L3, OPAL, LEP Electroweak Collaboration, Electroweak measurements in electron–positron collisions at W-boson-pair energies at LEP. Phys. Rep. 532, 119 (2013). arXiv:1302.3415
CMS Collaboration, Search for new physics in the lepton plus missing transverse momentum final state in proton–proton collisions at \(\sqrt{s}\) = 13 TeV. JHEP 07, 067 (2022). arXiv:2202.06075
J. de Blas, M. Chala, J. Santiago, Global constraints on lepton-quark contact interactions. Phys. Rev. D 88, 095011 (2013). arXiv:1307.5068
A. Crivellin, M. Hoferichter, M. Kirk, C.A. Manzari, L. Schnell, First-generation new physics in simplified models: from low-energy parity violation to the LHC. JHEP 10, 221 (2021). arXiv:2107.13569
L. Allwicher, D.A. Faroughy, F. Jaffredo, O. Sumensari, F. Wilsch, Drell–Yan tails beyond the standard model. arXiv:2207.10714
CMS Collaboration, Search for pair production of first-generation scalar leptoquarks at \(\sqrt{s} = 13\) TeV. Phys. Rev. D 99, 052002 (2019). arXiv:1811.01197
A. Crivellin, D. Müller, L. Schnell, Combined constraints on first generation leptoquarks. Phys. Rev. D 103, 115023 (2021). arXiv:2104.06417
L. Allwicher, D.A. Faroughy, F. Jaffredo, O. Sumensari, F. Wilsch, HighPT: a tool for high-\(p_T\) Drell–Yan tails beyond the standard model. arXiv:2207.10756
CMS Collaboration, Search for resonant and nonresonant new phenomena in high-mass dilepton final states at \( \sqrt{s} \) = 13 TeV. JHEP 07, 208 (2021). arXiv:2103.02708
ATLAS Collaboration, Search for a heavy charged boson in events with a charged lepton and missing transverse momentum from \(pp\) collisions at \(\sqrt{s} = 13\) TeV with the ATLAS detector. Phys. Rev. D 100, 052013 (2019). arXiv:1906.05609
H.H. Chen, Electromagnetic simulation of time-reversal violation in mirror spin 3/2 beta decays. Phys. Rev. 185, 2003 (1969)
B.R. Holstein, Tests for t invariance in allowed nuclear beta decay. Phys. Rev. C 5, 1529 (1972)
S.-I. Ando, J.A. McGovern, T. Sato, The D coefficient in neutron beta decay in effective field theory. Phys. Lett. B 677, 109 (2009). arXiv:0902.1194
M. González-Alonso, J. Martin Camalich, K. Mimouni, Renormalization-group evolution of new physics contributions to (semi)leptonic meson decays. Phys. Lett. B 772, 777 (2017). arXiv:1706.00410
V. Cirigliano, D. Díaz-Calderón, A. Falkowski, M. González-Alonso, A. Rodríguez-Sánchez, Semileptonic tau decays beyond the Standard Model. JHEP 04, 152 (2022). arXiv:2112.02087
W. Buchmuller, R. Ruckl, D. Wyler, Leptoquarks in lepton-quark collisions. Phys. Lett. B 191, 442 (1987)
I. Doršner, S. Fajfer, A. Greljo, J.F. Kamenik, N. Košnik, Physics of leptoquarks in precision experiments and at particle colliders. Phys. Rep. 641, 1 (2016). arXiv:1603.04993
I. Doršner, S. Fajfer, O. Sumensari, Muon \(g-2\) and scalar leptoquark mixing. JHEP 06, 089 (2020). arXiv:1910.03877
Acknowledgements
We would like to thank Pierre Delahaye and Olcyr Sumensari for useful discussions. We are very grateful to the authors of Ref. [43] for making their code available to us before publication. AF and ARS are supported by the Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR) under grant ANR-19-CE31-0012 (project MORA). AF is supported by the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie grant agreement No. 860881 (HIDDe\(\nu \) network). ARS was supported by European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under Grant agreement no. 101002846, ERC CoG “CosmoChart”.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
Appendices
Appendix A: Classification of leptoquarks
In this appendix we review the classification and interactions of leptoquarks, as well as the matching between the parameters of leptoquark models and the \(\nu \)SMEFT effective operators relevant for our analysis. Leptoquarks are bosons that can have an interaction vertex with a quark and a lepton. In this paper we restrict to leptoquarks coupling only to the first generation of the SM fermions. For spin-0 and spin-1 leptoquarks, the representations under the SM gauge group that allow for such interactions have been catalogued [51, 52] and reproduced here in Table 3. In this paper we forbid baryon number violating interactions, such that leptoquarks can be assigned baryon and lepton numbers that are conserved in perturbation theory.
One can show that the \({\bar{S}}_1\), \({\tilde{S}}_1\), \(S_3\), \({\bar{U}}_1\), \({\tilde{U}}_1\), and \(U_3\) leptoquarks do not contribute to the D parameter, therefore we will not consider them in the following. A simple argument is that the quantum numbers of these leptoquarks permit only a single trilinear interaction term with a quark and a lepton, in which case the phase of the coupling constant can be always eliminated by rephasing the leptoquark field. On the other hand, irreducible phases can be present in the interactions of \(S_1\), \(R_2\), \({\tilde{R}}_2\), \(U_1\), \(V_2\), and \({\tilde{V}}_2\) if they couple to at least two distinct lepton-quark structures. For these leptoquarks, we consider a general Lagrangian of the form
Above, \({{{\mathcal {L}}}}_{\textrm{kinetic}}\) contains the kinetic and mass terms of \(S_1\), \(R_2\), \({\tilde{R}}_2\), \(U_1\), \(V_2\), and \({\tilde{V}}_2\). \({{{\mathcal {L}}}}_{\textrm{scalar}}\) contains Yukawa interactions for the scalar leptoquarks:
\({{{\mathcal {L}}}}_{\textrm{vector}}\) contains all possible baryon-number conserving tri-linear interactions of vector leptoquark with a quark and a lepton:
Integrating out the leptoquarks, we obtain the following Wilson coefficients of the \(\nu \)SMEFT operators defined in Eqs. (2.22), (2.28) and (2.33):
As expected, the Wilson coefficients pick up an imaginary part when there is a relative phase between two different tri-linear couplings of the same leptoquark. That phase is a necessary but not sufficient condition for generating the D parameter. As is clear from Eqs. (2.24) and (2.30), to this end we also need a relative phase between the tensor Wilson coefficient (\(C_{lequ}^{(3)}\) or \(C_{l \nu q d}^{(3)} \)) and the scalar ones (\( C_{lequ}^{(1)}\), \(C_{ledq}\), \( C_{l \nu q d}^{(1)}\), \(C_{l\nu u q}\)). Inspection of Eq. (A.4) shows that the relative phase can arise only if two distinct leptoquarks with different quantum numbers contribute. In other words, a (purely) leptoquark scenario for generating an observable D parameter must contain at least two leptoquarks near the TeV scale coupled to the first generation fermions. Finally, we note that leptoquarks do not generate the Wilson coefficients \(C_{\phi u d}\) and \(C_{\phi e \nu }\) in Eqs. (2.12) and (2.37). Therefore scenarios Ia and IV in our nomenclature cannot arise from purely leptoquark BSM models at tree level. They can however arise in hybrid models, for example when a leptoquark is accompanied by an exotic right-handed W’ vector boson.
So far we haven’t discussed how to connect leptoquarks to the scenario Ib where the D parameter is generated through the dimension-8 \(\nu \)SMEFT operator in Eq. (2.17). That operator is not induced by integrating out the leptoquarks from the Lagrangian in Eq. (A.1). However, there is a natural generalization of Eq. (A.1) to include cubic and quartic interactions of leptoquarks with the Higgs field. Such interactions result in mixing between distinct leptoquarks after electroweak symmetry breaking, and lead to additional operators involving the Higgs field in the \(\nu \)SMEFT effective theory below the leptoquark mass scale. All renormalizable interactions mixing two scalar leptoquarks were catalogued in Ref. [53]. Among those, the quartic interaction
induces the dimension-8 operator in Eq. (2.17) with the Wilson coefficient
One can show that the remaining mixing interactions discussed in [53] induce dimension-6 and 8 operators that are not relevant for the D parameter, and therefore they are not considered in this paper. In analogy to Eq. (A.5) on can also consider mixing of the vector leptoquarks via the (non-renormalizable) quartic interaction
This also induces the dimension-8 operator in Eq. (2.17) with the Wilson coefficient
All in all, scenario Ib for generating the D parameter can be realized in a BSM model with two distinct SU(2) doublet leptoquarks that mix after electroweak symmetry breaking. Such models were already considered in Ref. [5], and in this paper we will update that analysis taking into account new experimental constraints, in particular from the LHC.
We close this appendix with a discussion of other dimension-6 \(\nu \)SMEFT operators generated at tree level by integrating out the leptoquarks from the Lagrangian Eq. (A.1). In addition to the operators defined in Eqs. (2.22), (2.28) and (2.33), which can have complex Wilson coefficients, there arise certain 4-fermion operators with real Wilson coefficients. The latter are irrelevant for the sake of CP violation, but they may be important for CP-conserving precision observables in low-energy experiments and at the LHC. The set of dimension-6 CP-conserving dimension-6 operators generated by integrating out leptoquarks is
Matching the Wilson coefficients at tree level one finds
Appendix B: Coulomb corrections
In this appendix we present a derivation of the one-loop Coulomb corrections to the correlation coefficients in beta decay, originally calculated by Jackson, Treiman, and Wyld in Ref. [8]. More precisely, we focus here on the \(\mathcal {O}(\alpha )\) Coulomb corrections due to on-shell particles propagating in the loop, which is controlled by unitarity. We refer to those as the unitarity Coulomb corrections. Note that there are additional Coulomb corrections, not captured by the unitarity method. We are not concerned with those in this appendix. Nevertheless, let us note that the leading part of these corrections can be recovered by introducing the familiar Fermi function multiplying the overall decay rate in Eq. (1.1). This gives a small overall correction to correlation coefficients, which may be very important to extract precise SM predictions, but which is irrelevant for most applications in the context of BSM physics.
As a particular application, we reproduce the unitarity Coulomb corrections to the D parameter in Eq. (4.2). While the final result merely reproduces the one in Ref. [8], our calculation, based on a unitarity relation also used by Callan and Treiman to compute extra recoil contributions to D within the V-A (SM) picture [2], is more concise and compact. In particular, we find that, at the leading order in the EFT expansion, the unitarity Coulomb corrections to all the correlation coefficients in Eq. (1.1) can be briefly summarized as a shift of the leading order Wilson coefficients, cf. Eq. (B.11). For simplicity, in the derivation we only consider \(\beta ^-\) decay with the parent and daughter nuclei having the same spin J, and ignore interactions involving the right-handed neutrino (effectively setting the \(C_X^-\) Wilson coefficients to zero). A more general derivation would proceed along the same lines. For concreteness of the discussion, we assume here that all the Wilson coefficients \(C_X^+\) are real. With this assumption, the unitarity Coulomb corrections give the imaginary part to the beta decay amplitude. Nevertheless, our derivation is correct also for complex Wilson coefficients, as we discuss at the end of the appendix.
The leading order amplitude for \(\beta ^-\) same-spin decay can be written in the following form (see [13])
Above, \(C_X^+\) are the Wilson coefficients in the EFT Lagrangian of Eq. (2.2). \(J_1^z\) and \(J_2^z\) label the polarizations of the parent and daughter nuclei. The leptonic currents are defined as \(L^\mu \equiv {\bar{x}}_3 {\bar{\sigma }}^\mu y_4\), \(L \equiv y_3 y_4\), \(L^{0k} \equiv y_3 \sigma ^0 {\bar{\sigma }}^k y_4\), where \(k=1\dots 3\), and \(x_3\), \(y_3\) are the 2-component spinor wave functions of the outgoing electron and \(y_4\) is the spinor wave functions of the outgoing antineutrino.Footnote 9 Next, \({{\mathcal {T}}}_{(J)}^k\) are the spin-J generators of the rotation group. We write down the amplitude in the limit of unbroken isospin symmetry, thus \(m_{{{{\mathcal {N}}}}_2} = m_{{{{\mathcal {N}}}}_1} \equiv m_{{{\mathcal {N}}}}\). The common normalization factor is \(M_F = \delta _{j_3',j_3 + 1} \sqrt{ j (j+1) - j_3( j_3 + 1)}\), where \((j,j_3)\) and \((j,j_3')\) are the isospin quantum numbers of the parent and daughter nuclei. The parameter r, which is real by time-reversal invariance, is referred to as the ratio of Gamow–Teller and Fermi matrix elements in the literature. For the neutron decay \(r=\sqrt{3}\), while for nuclear beta decay r is extracted from experiment.
Next, we need the 1-loop corrections to this amplitude due to a photon exchange between the daughter nucleus and the electron. We denote this amplitude by \({{\mathcal {M}}}^{(1)} ({{{\mathcal {N}}}}_1 \rightarrow {{{\mathcal {N}}}}_2 e^- {\bar{\nu }})\). Actually, we only need the imaginary part of \({{\mathcal {M}}}^{(1)}\), which is determined by unitarity using the master formula
Here, \(d \Pi '_2\) denotes the 2-body phase space of the intermediate \( {{{\mathcal {N}}}}_2 e^-\) pair, \( J_{2'}^z\) is the polarization of the intermediate nucleus, and \(h_{3'}\) is he polarization of the intermediate electron. \({{\mathcal {M}}}_{\textrm{em}}\) is the tree-level scattering amplitude due to a photon exchange between the daughter nucleus and the electron. Expanding it in \(1/m_{{{\mathcal {N}}}}\), for an arbitrary spin J the leading piece takes the form
Above, \(q_e = -1\), Z is a (positive) charge of the daughter nucleus, \(e \sim 0.3\) is the electromagnetic coupling constant, the incoming momenta of the nucleus and electron are denoted by \(p_{2'}\) and \(p_{3'}\), and the outgoing momentum of the electron is denoted by \(k_{3}\). The 2-component spinor wave function of the incoming electron are denoted as \(x_{3'}\) and \(y_{3'}\), and the spinor wave function of the outgoing electron are denoted as \(x_{3}\) and \(y_{3}\).
One comment is in order here. As mentioned earlier, there are additional Coulomb corrections not captured by the unitarity method. However, the only way of generating an imaginary part of the amplitude is through interactions of on-shell particles, and at order \(\alpha ^1\) these are governed by the unitarity relation in Eq. (B.2).
Plugging Eqs. (B.3) and (B.1) into Eq. (B.2) we get
where now \(L'{}^\mu \equiv {\bar{x}}_{3'} {\bar{\sigma }}^\mu y_4\), \(L' \equiv y_{3'} y_4\), \(L'{}^{0k} \equiv y_{3'} \sigma ^0 {\bar{\sigma }}^k y_4\). We perform the \(h_{3'}\) sum over the intermediate electron polarizations to derive
We insert the spin sums Eq. (B.5) into Eq. (B.4). Working at the leading order in \(1/m_{{{\mathcal {N}}}}\) we can replace in the spin sums \(p_{2'}^0 \rightarrow m_{{{\mathcal {N}}}}\), \(p_{2'}^k \rightarrow 0\), \(k_2 k_3 \rightarrow m_{{{\mathcal {N}}}} E_e\). With these replacement, the spin-summed Eq. (B.4) becomes
We can now integrate over the intermediate phase space using
where for the time being we ignore the IR divergence corresponding to \(\cos \theta \rightarrow 1\) (forward re-scattering). This plus some more spinor algebra leads to
Combine now the unitarity Coulomb correction with the leading order amplitude in Eq. (B.1) we obtain \({{\mathcal {M}}}\equiv {{\mathcal {M}}}^{(0)} + i {{\textrm{Im}}} \,{{\mathcal {M}}}^{(1)}\):
where we defined
The effect of the blue terms in Eq. (B.9) is an overall rescaling of all leading order Wilson coefficients by the same (IR divergent) phase factor: \(C_X^+ \rightarrow C_X^+ e^{i x}\). This does not change the correlation coefficients, as they always depend on the \(C_X {\bar{C}}_Y\) combinations. On the other hand, the effect of the red terms is to rotate the leading order Wilson coefficients among each other, which does affect the correlations. All in all, the unitarity Coulomb corrections to the beta decay amplitude can be concisely described by the transformation
where at this point we generalize the result to \(\beta ^\mp \) decays (the ± signs on the right-hand side), and to include the right-handed neutrino interactions (the \(C_X^-\) Wilson coefficients). It also holds for complex Wilson coefficients (replacing imaginary part by absorptive part in Eq. (B.2)). One can check that inserting this transformation in the leading order expression for the correlation coefficients (again except for the overall Fermi function effect and ignoring subleading \(\mathcal {O}(Z^2 \alpha ^2)\) terms) reproduces the Coulomb corrections listed in Ref. [8]. One particular application of Eq. (B.11) is to easily obtain the unitarity Coulomb corrections to the D parameter in Eq. (4.2) at the \(1/m_N^0\) order in the EFT.
Rights and permissions
Open Access This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons licence, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons licence, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article’s Creative Commons licence and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this licence, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.
Funded by SCOAP3. SCOAP3 supports the goals of the International Year of Basic Sciences for Sustainable Development.
About this article
Cite this article
Falkowski, A., Rodríguez-Sánchez, A. On the sensitivity of the D parameter to new physics. Eur. Phys. J. C 82, 1134 (2022). https://doi.org/10.1140/epjc/s10052-022-11085-3
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1140/epjc/s10052-022-11085-3