3
2846 R. KUMAR AND B. K. AGARWAL 'D. D. Reeder and K. V. L. Sarma, Phys. Rev. 172, 1566 (1968). 2 ~ . A. Collins, B. J. Hartley, R. W. Moore, and K. J. Moriarty, Nucl. Phys. E, 381 (1970). 3~. Meyers, Y. Noirat, M. Rimpault, and Ph. Salin, Nucl. Phys. E, 99 (1970). 4~oshiaki Karasuno and Shigeo Minami, Phys. Rev. D 2, 1320 (1970). '~aj Kumar, B. K. Agarwal, and C. P. Singh, Phys. Rev. D 4, 2849 (1971). %. W. Coulter, E. S. Ma, and G. L. Shaw, Phys. Rev. Letters 2,106 (1969). 'A. D. Martin and C. Michael, Phys. Letters =, 297 (1970). 8 ~ . Imachi, K. Kinoshita, Kunio Shiga, F. Toyoda, and M. Uehara, Progr. Theoret. Phys. (Kyoto) 43, 444 (1970). 'particle Data Group, Rev. Mod. Phys. 43, S1 (1971). 'OR. Barloutaud, Doung Nhu Hoa, J. Griseiin, D. W. Merrill, J. C. Scheuer, W. Hoogland, J. C. Kluyver, A. Minguzzi-Rauzi, A. M. Rossi, B. Baher, E. Hirsch, J. Goldberg, and M. Laloum, Nucl. Phys. E, 493 (1969). avid J. Crennell, Uri Karshon, Kwan Wu Lai, John S. O'Neall, J. Michael Scarr, Robert M. Lea, Thomas G. Schumann, and Ernest M. Urvater, Phys. Rev. Letters 23, 1347 (1969). "w. L. Yen, A. C. Ammann, D. D. Carmony, R. L. Eisner, A. F. Garfinkel, L. J. Gutay, R. V. Lakshmi, D. H. Miller, and G. W. Tautfest, Phys. Rev. Letters 22 963 (1969). %. Hodge (see Ref. 1). "0. I. Dahl, Lyndon M. Hardy, Richard J. Hess, Janos Kirz, Donald H. Miller, and Joseph A. Schwartz, Phys. Rev. 163, 1430 (1967). I'M. Abramovich, H. Blumenfeld, V. Chaloupka, S. 0. Chung, J. Diaz, L. Montanot, J. Pernegr, B. Reucroft, J. Rubio, and B. Sadoulet, Nucl. Phys. =7,477 (1971). 16~. S. LOOS,U. E. Kruse, and E. L. Goldwasser, Phys. Rev. 173, 1330 (1968). 'IS. M. Pruss, C. W. Akerlof, D. J. Meyer, S. P. Ying, J. Lales, R. A. Lundy, D. R. Rust, C. E. W. Ward, and D. D. Yovanovitch, Phys. Rev. Letters 23, 189 (1969). "w. Cooper, W. Manner, B. Musgrave, and L. Voyvo- dic, Phys. Rev. Letters 20, 472 (1968). "A. Bashian, G. Finocchiaro, M. L. Good, P. D. Grannis, 0. Guisan, J. Kirz, Y. Lee, R. Pittman, G. C. Fischer, and D. D. Reeder, unpublished report, presented at the Fifth International Conference on Elementary Particles, Lund, Sweden, 1969. PHYSICAL REVIEW D VOLUME 5, NUMBER 11 1 JUNE 1972 Possible Origin for Symmetry Breaking* J. Schechter and Y. Ueda Physics Department, Syracuse University, Syracuse, New York 13210 (Received 9 November 1971) We conjecture that the total Lagrangian of strong, electromagnetic, and weak interactions is invariant under the "left-handed SU(2)" of the weak currents, which is however spontane- ously broken. We discuss a formula for the "tadpole" part of the K-meson electromagnetic mass splitting, which may be related to the present scheme. Several authorslT4 pointed out that it is possible to construct unified theories of the weak and elec- tromagnetic interaction based on the left-handed SU(2) group generated by the leptonic and Cabibbo weak currents. The theory may be arranged so that the Lagrangian is exactly invariant under this SU(2) group. This symmetry is then spontaneously brokenzv3 so that the multiplets of particles in- volved no longer are degenerate in mass. Specifi- cally, the e mass splits away from the v, mass (which is zero), the p mass splits away from the v, mass and the intermediate-boson mass splits away from the photon mass. Because of the pres- ence of gauge fields, no Goldstone bosons appear.5 It is clear that not all of these splittings are small. Thus, it is tempting to speculate that this mecha- nism may in fact be responsible for the apparent symmetry breaking of the strong Lagrangian which we take to be exactly chiral -SU(3) x SU(3) -invari- ant. Since the left-handed SU(2) group of the Cabibbo currents is a subgroup of chiral SU(3) X SU(3) we would then have the situation where G,,, + Gelectromagnetic +Cad is invariant under this SU(2) group. This is our basic conjecture. First we list the fields needed to construct all presently known particles (neglecting gravity): (i) the leptons e, v, , p, and v, ; (ii) the photon and possibly some intermediate vector bosons; (iii) the quarks q,, q,, and q,. We next give the transformation properties3 of the fields with respect to the left-handed SU(2). For convenience we define new quark fields related

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Page 1: Possible Origin for Symmetry Breaking

2846 R . K U M A R AND B . K . A G A R W A L

'D. D. Reeder and K. V. L. S a r m a , Phys. Rev. 172, 1566 (1968).

2 ~ . A. Collins, B. J. Hart ley, R. W. Moore, and K. J. Moriarty, Nucl. Phys. E, 381 (1970).

3 ~ . Meyers , Y. Noirat, M. Rimpault, and Ph. Salin, Nucl. Phys. E, 99 (1970).

4 ~ o s h i a k i Karasuno and Shigeo Minami, Phys. Rev. D 2, 1320 (1970).

' ~ a j Kumar , B. K. Agarwal, and C. P . Singh, Phys. Rev. D 4, 2849 (1971).

%. W. Coulter , E. S. Ma, and G. L. Shaw, Phys. Rev. Le t te rs 2 , 1 0 6 (1969).

'A. D. Mart in and C . Michael, Phys. Le t te rs =, 297 (1970).

8 ~ . Imachi, K. Kinoshita, Kunio Shiga, F. Toyoda, and M. Uehara, P r o g r . Theoret. Phys. (Kyoto) 43, 444 (1970).

' pa r t ic le Data Group, Rev. Mod. Phys. 43, S1 (1971). 'OR. Barloutaud, Doung Nhu Hoa, J. Grisei in, D. W.

Merr i l l , J. C. Scheuer, W. Hoogland, J. C. Kluyver, A. Minguzzi-Rauzi, A. M. Ross i , B. Baher , E. Hirsch, J. Goldberg, and M. Laloum, Nucl. Phys. E, 493 (1969). avid J. Crennell , U r i Karshon, Kwan Wu Lai , John

S. O'Neall, J. Michael S c a r r , Rober t M. Lea , Thomas

G. Schumann, and Ernes t M. Urva te r , Phys. Rev. L e t t e r s 23, 1347 (1969). "w. L. Yen, A. C. Ammann, D. D. Carmony, R. L.

E i s n e r , A. F. Garfinkel, L. J. Gutay, R. V. Lakshmi, D. H. Miller , and G. W. Tautfest, Phys. Rev. Le t te rs 22 963 (1969). %. Hodge (see Ref. 1). "0. I. Dahl, Lyndon M. Hardy, Richard J. Hess , Janos

Ki rz , Donald H. Miller , and Joseph A. Schwartz, Phys. Rev. 163, 1430 (1967).

I'M. Abramovich, H. Blumenfeld, V. Chaloupka, S. 0. Chung, J. Diaz, L. Montanot, J. Pernegr , B. Reucroft, J. Rubio, and B. Sadoulet, Nucl. Phys. =7,477 (1971).

1 6 ~ . S. LOOS, U. E. Kruse , and E. L. Goldwasser, Phys. Rev. 173, 1330 (1968).

'IS. M. P r u s s , C. W. Akerlof, D. J. Meyer, S. P. Ying, J. Lales, R. A. Lundy, D. R. Rust , C. E. W. Ward, and D. D. Yovanovitch, Phys. Rev. L e t t e r s 23, 189 (1969). "w. Cooper, W. Manner, B. Musgrave, and L. Voyvo-

dic, Phys. Rev. Le t te rs 20, 472 (1968). "A. Bashian, G. Finocchiaro, M. L. Good, P. D.

Grannis, 0. Guisan, J. Ki rz , Y. Lee , R . Pi t tman, G. C. F i s c h e r , and D. D. Reeder , unpublished repor t , presented a t the Fifth International Conference on Elementary Par t ic les , Lund, Sweden, 1969.

P H Y S I C A L R E V I E W D V O L U M E 5 , N U M B E R 11 1 J U N E 1 9 7 2

Possible Origin for Symmetry Breaking*

J. Schechter and Y. Ueda Physics Department, Syracuse Universi ty , Syracuse, New York 13210

(Received 9 November 1971)

We conjecture that the total Lagrangian of s trong, electromagnetic, and weak interact ions i s invariant under the "left-handed SU(2)" of the weak cur ren ts , which i s however spontane- ously broken. We d iscuss a formula for the "tadpole" p a r t of the K-meson electromagnetic m a s s splitting, which may be related to the presen t scheme.

Several authorslT4 pointed out that i t i s possible to construct unified theories of the weak and elec- tromagnetic interaction based on the left-handed SU(2) group generated by the leptonic and Cabibbo weak currents . The theory may be arranged s o that the Lagrangian i s exactly invariant under this SU(2) group. This symmetry i s then spontaneously brokenzv3 so that the multiplets of particles in- volved no longer a r e degenerate in mass . Specifi- cally, the e mass splits away from the v, mass (which is zero), the p mass splits away from the v, mass and the intermediate-boson mass spli ts away from the photon mass. Because of the p re s - ence of gauge fields, no Goldstone bosons appear.5 It i s clear that not a l l of these splittings a r e small. Thus, i t i s tempting to speculate that this mecha- nism may in fact be responsible for the apparent

symmetry breaking of the strong Lagrangian which we take to be exactly chiral -SU(3) x SU(3) -invari- ant.

Since the left-handed SU(2) group of the Cabibbo currents i s a subgroup of chiral SU(3) X SU(3) we would then have the situation where G,,, + Gelectromagnetic +Cad i s invariant under this SU(2) group. This is our basic conjecture.

F i r s t we l is t the fields needed to construct al l presently known particles (neglecting gravity):

(i) the leptons e , v, , p , and v, ; (ii) the photon and possibly some intermediate

vector bosons; (iii) the quarks q,, q,, and q,. We next give the transformation properties3 of

the fields with respect to the left-handed SU(2). For convenience we define new quark fields related

Page 2: Possible Origin for Symmetry Breaking

5 - P O S S I B L E O R I G I N F O R S Y M M E T R Y B R E A K I N G 2847

to the old ones by a rotation through the Cabibbo angle 8,

Q, = -q, sin8 + q, cos8.

Then the doublets a r e

while the singlets a r e assigned to be

where, for each field 4 we have GL = $(l + y,)$ and +bR = +(I - y5)&. The photon and intermediate bosons may be c o n ~ i d e r e d ~ ' ~ to form a triplet but we shall make no use of this in the present note. A possible way of solving the traditional problems associated with neutral currents in such a scheme has been given in Ref. 3.

To implement the spontaneous breakdown mech- anism we may introduce, a s usual, an auxiliary doublet of scalar fields

which has nonvanishing vacuum expectation value, i.e., ($),= (Ox), where h i s a rea l number. The p - mass te rm in the Lagrangian, for example, comes from the SU(2) -invariant te rm

which simply becomes -mvEF when 4 i s replaced by i t s vacuum expectation value. Analogously we may consider bilinear quark mass t e rms which a r e invariant under the left -handed SU(2) and which may, following Gell-Mann,' be considered respon- sible for a l l breaking of SU(3) x SU(3). The most general SU(2) -invariant bilinear quark te rm in the Lagrangian which conserves electric charge7 is essentially given by

where f , . - . f, a r e some arbitrary constantsS and 7, is the Pauli matrix. If we insist on a CP-con- serving theory we require the f , to be real.

Now Eq. (4) contains chiral SU(3) xSU(3)-symme- try -breaking t e rms belonging to the (3, 3*) + (3*, 3) representation. The usual symmetry -breaking te rm of this type is written

When (4) i s expanded by using (1) and replacing q5 by (@), we see that i t gives r i s e to t e rms of the type given in (5) plus some additional I AS I = 1 t e rms . These / A S I = 1 te rms can be eliminated by the special choice o f f , :

[~ l t e rna t ive ly , the I AS I = 1 t e rms can be "trans - formed" away by SU(3) xSU(3) rotations.] Thus, the usual type of strong-symmetry -breaking t e rms may conceivably result from the mechanism which spontaneously breaks the weak and electromagnetic symmetry. We reemphasize that this same mech- anism is expected to produce the v, -p and pho- ton-intermediate -boson splittings which a r e not small even on the strong-interaction scale.

As i t stands (5) contains three unknown con- stants - the quark "masses" - which a r e not fixed from (4) and (6). A number of interesting modelsg have been made to try to relate these quantities. Here we would like to mention another model which leads to an experimentally interesting relation. The model i s defined by the equation

This ansatz would correspond to setting f , = 0 in (4). The f , te rm i s distinguished from the others by the fact that i t contains the matrix 7,. This is a reflection of the fact that in the group SU(2) the conjugate defining representation i s equivalent to the defining representation itself. Such a circum - stance is accidental to SU(2) and does not hold in la rger groups like SU(3). Perhaps, therefore, the introduction of a higher combined weak-electro- magnetic symmetry might eliminate the f , term.

To find a consequence of (7) , we note that a great deal of effort has been expended by many workers on an SU(3) xSU(3)-invariant strong interaction with the symmetry-breaking t e rm of (5). One can proceed by using the so-called "current-algebra" approach or , equivalently, to the approximation in which people work, by using a linear SU(3) o mod- el . We have the problem by the lat ter method so i t i s convenient for u s to car ry over the previous results and see what happens when (7) i s imposed. We consider three quantities A, a m i and three quantities a , a ( 3, q, )o. The weak decay constants and some of the spin-zero particles' masses a r e given in t e rms of these. Specifically the squared masses of the pion and the scalar i so- vector part icle [6(960) presumably] a r e givenlo by

Page 3: Possible Origin for Symmetry Breaking

2848 J . S C H E C H T E R A N D Y . U E D A

In addition, that par t ("tadpole" part) of the K + - K O m a s s difference which is not due t o the one- photon self-energy diagram is"

where W = a3/a and a = i ( a , + a 2 ) . Imposing A , = 0 in (8) and (9) gives

Since (m ./m ,I2 is s m a l l a , only differs f rom a, by about 2%. Substituting (11) into (10) gives the formula

Numerically (12) yields -0.57m ,02 if W = 1.56 (from the equation1' W = 2 F K / F , - 1) o r - 0 . 5 4 ~ 1 if W = 1.7 (from fitting the 17' mass1'). Equation (12) should be compared with

The est imate of the one-photon contribution given above1' is model dependent s o we may consider the agreement reasonable. The fact that the sign is right is interest ing s ince the one-photon contribu- tion has the wrong sign. Also the presence of vec- t o r and axial mesons was not taken into account in the derivation of (12).

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

After the f i r s t version of this note was submitted, we received a preprint by Weinberg13 in which the left-handed SU(2) invariance of the total Lagran- gian w a s independently conjectured on the b a s i s of renormalizability. We a l s o received a repor t by ~ a j a s e k a r a n ' ~ which gives a discussion of theor ies of this type. We would like t o thank these authors fo r sending u s copies of the i r work.

*Work supported by the U . S. Atomic Energy Commis- sion.

'J. Schwinger, Ann. Phys. (N.Y.) 2, 407 (1957); S. L. Glashow, Nucl. Phys. 22, 579 (1961); A. Salarn and J. C . Ward, Phys. Letters 2, 168 (1964).

's. Weinberg, Phys. Rev. Letters 19, 1264 (1967). 3 ~ . Schechter and Y. Ueda, Phys. Rev. D 2, 736

(1970). 4 ~ . D. Lee, Phys. Rev. Letters 26, 801 (1971). his mechanism i s discussed by P. W. Anderson,

Phys. Rev. 130, 439 (1963); P. W. Higgs, Phys. Letters 12, 132 (1964); F. Englert and R. Brout, Phys. Rev. - Letters 2, 321 (1964); G. S. Guralnik, C. R. Hagen, and T. W. B. Kibble, ibid. 13, 585 (1964).

6 ~ . Gell-Mann, Phys. Rev. 125, 1067 (1962); M. Gell- Mann, R. Oakes, and B. Renner, ibid. 175, 2195 (1968); S. L. Glashow and S. Weinberg, Phys. Rev. Letters 20, 224 (1968). -

'or equivalently we may impose "weak hypercharge" conservation. See Ref. 3.

8 ~ h e s e terms were previously given in Eq. (39) of Ref. 3, where the f, te rm was unfortunately omitted. This implies that the statement made in Ref. 3 that the mass of ql cannot come from this mechanism is in- correct . The existence of this additional te rm has been pointed out by Mukunda (see Ref. 14). k. J. Oakes, Phys. Letters E, 683 (1969); R. Gatto,

G. Sartori , and M. Tonin, ibid. E, 128 (1968); N. Cabibbo and L. Maiani, Phys. Rev. D 1, 707 (1971). The scheme of Oakes can be obtained by imposing f = &Ajl(cot29+ tan2@) a s well a s f = 0 and (6) on the coefficients in (4). Thus, it i s a special ca se of our model.

'OJ. Schechter and Y. Ueda, Phys. Rev. D 3, 2874 (1971). "J. Schechter and Y. Ueda, Phys. Rev. D 4, 733 (1971). "R. H. Socolow, Phys. Rev. 137, B1221 (1965); J. H.

Wojtaszek, R. E. hlarshak, and Riazuddin, ibkd. 136, B1053 (1964). 13S. Weinberg, Phys. Rev. Letters 3, 1688 (1971). I*G. Rajasekaran, Saha Institute report (unpublished).