6533b7cefe1ef96bd125729d

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Neutrino anarchy and renormalization group evolution

Matthias KönigVedran BrdarJoachim Kopp

subject

PhysicsParticle physics010308 nuclear & particles physicsHigh Energy Physics::PhenomenologyInverseFOS: Physical sciencesRenormalization group01 natural sciencesHigh Energy Physics - PhenomenologyHigh Energy Physics - Phenomenology (hep-ph)Seesaw molecular geometry0103 physical sciencesProbability distributionGrand Unified TheoryNeutrinoElectroweak scale010306 general physics

description

The observed pattern of neutrino mixing angles is in good agreement with the hypothesis of neutrino anarchy, which posits that Nature has chosen the entries of the leptonic mixing matrix at random. In this paper we investigate how stable this conclusion is under renormalization group effects. Working in the simplest type-I seesaw model and two variants of the inverse seesaw model we study how the statistical distributions of the neutrino mixing parameters evolve between the Grand Unification scale and the electroweak scale. Especially in the inverse seesaw case we find significant distortions: mixing angles tend to be smaller after RG running, and the Dirac CP phase tends to be closer to zero. The p-value describing the compatibility between the observed mixing angles and the anarchy hypothesis increases by 10-20%. This illustrates that RG effects are highly relevant for quantitative studies of the anarchy scenario.

10.1103/physrevd.93.093010http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/physrevd.93.093010