Abstract

We discuss neutrino masses and mixing in the framework of a supersymmetric model with an $U(1)_{R}$ symmetry, consisting of a single right handed neutrino superfield with an appropriate R charge. The lepton number ($L$) of the standard model fermions are identified with the negative of their R-charges. As a result, a subset of leptonic R-parity violating operators can be present and are consistent with the $U(1)_R$ symmetry. This model can produce one light Dirac neutrino mass at the tree level without the need of introducing a very small neutrino Yukawa coupling. We analyze the scalar sector of this model in detail paying special attention to the mass of the lightest Higgs boson. One of the sneutrinos might acquire a substantial vacuum expectation value leading to interesting phenomenological consequences. Different sum rules involving the physical scalar masses are obtained and we show that the lightest Higgs boson mass receives a contribution proportional to the square of the neutrino Yukawa coupling $f$. This allows for a 125 GeV Higgs boson at the tree level for $f \sim {\cal O} (1)$ and still having a small tree level mass for the active neutrino. In order to fit the experimental results involving neutrino masses and mixing angles we introduce a small breaking of $U(1)_R$ symmetry, in the context of anomaly mediated supersymmetry breaking. In the presence of this small R-symmetry breaking, light neutrino masses receive contributions at the one-loop level involving the R-parity violating interactions. We also identify the right handed sterile neutrino as a warm dark matter candidate in our model. In the case of R-symmetry breaking, the large $f$ case is characterized by a few hundred MeV lightest neutralino as an unstable lightest supersymmetric particle (LSP) and we briefly discuss the cosmological implications of such a scenario.

Highlights

  • The observation of a new neutral boson, widely believed to be the first elementary scalar boson of nature, by the CMS and ATLAS experimental collaborations at the CERN LHC is perhaps the most important discovery in high energy physics in recent times [1, 2]

  • In order to fit the experimental results involving neutrino masses and mixing angles we introduce a small breaking of U(1)R symmetry, in the context of anomaly mediated supersymmetry breaking

  • We have studied a supersymmetric model of neutrino masses and mixing with an U(1)R symmetry and a single right handed neutrino superfield

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Summary

Introduction

The observation of a new neutral boson, widely believed to be the first elementary scalar boson of nature, by the CMS and ATLAS experimental collaborations at the CERN LHC is perhaps the most important discovery in high energy physics in recent times [1, 2]. There are extensive studies involving MSSM with R-parity violation on neutrino masses and mixing, under various assumptions, both at the tree and the loop level [13] It is, tempting to see whether there exist supersymmetric models which can naturally explain the observed mass of the new scalar boson at ∼ 125 GeV, relax the strong constraints on SUSY particle masses coming from the LHC, provide a suitable dark matter candidate and at the same time produce neutrino masses and mixing consistent with current data. One must remember that the above superpotential (eq (2.1)) is written in this rotated basis

Soft supersymmetry breaking interactions
The scalar sector
Symmetry breaking and minimization conditions
CP-even neutral scalar sector
CP-odd neutral scalar sector
Charged scalar sector
Sum rules
Neutrino sector in R-symmetric case
Dirac mass of the neutrino
R-symmetry breaking
Neutralino-neutrino mass matrix in R-breaking scenario
Case — 1
Case — 2
Pseudo-Dirac case
Majorana case
Right handed neutrino as a keV warm dark matter
One loop effects to generate neutrino mass
Charged lepton-slepton loop
Squark-quark loop
Neutralino-Higgs boson loop
Numerical analysis
Neutrino masses and mixing: inverted hierarchy
Neutrino masses and mixing: normal hierarchy
10 Case with large neutrino Yukawa coupling
11 Conclusions and outlook
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