6533b860fe1ef96bd12c3214

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Neutrinoless double beta decay and QCD running at low energy scales

Marcela GonzálezMartin HirschSergey KovalenkoSergey Kovalenko

subject

Quantum chromodynamicsPhysicsCoupling constantParticle physics010308 nuclear & particles physicsScalar (mathematics)Perturbative QCDFOS: Physical sciences01 natural sciencesHigh Energy Physics - PhenomenologyOperator (computer programming)High Energy Physics - Phenomenology (hep-ph)Double beta decay0103 physical sciencesTensorPerturbation theory (quantum mechanics)010306 general physics

description

There is a common belief that the main uncertainties in the theoretical analysis of neutrinoless double beta ($0\nu\beta\beta$) decay originate from the nuclear matrix elements. Here, we uncover another previously overlooked source of potentially large uncertainties stemming from non-perturbative QCD effects. Recently perturbative QCD corrections have been calculated for all dimension 6 and 9 effective operators describing $0\nu\beta\beta$-decay and their importance for a reliable treatment of $0\nu\beta\beta$-decay has been demonstrated. However, these perturbative results are valid at energy scales above $\sim 1$ GeV, while the typical $0\nu\beta\beta$-scale is about $\sim 100$ MeV. In view of this fact we examine the possibility of extrapolating the perturbative results towards sub-GeV non-perturbative scales on the basis of the QCD coupling constant "freezing" behavior using Background Perturbation Theory. Our analysis suggests that such an infrared extrapolation does modify the perturbative results for both short-range and long-range mechanisms of $0\nu\beta\beta$-decay in general only moderately. We also discuss that the tensor$\otimes$tensor effective operator can not appear alone in the low-energy limit of any renormalizable high-scale model and then demonstrate that all five linearly independent combinations of the scalar and tensor operators, that can appear in renormalizable models, are infrared stable.

10.1103/physrevd.97.115005http://repo.scoap3.org/api