Tuesdays 10:30 - 11:30 | Fridays 11:30 - 12:30
Showing votes from 2021-12-03 12:30 to 2021-12-07 11:30 | Next meeting is Tuesday Apr 22nd, 10:30 am.
We study the formation and evolution of topological defects that arise in the post-recombination phase transition predicted by the gravitational neutrino mass model in [Dvali, Funcke, 2016]. In the transition, global skyrmions, monopoles, strings, and domain walls form due to the spontaneous breaking of the neutrino flavor symmetry. These defects are unique in their softness and origin, as they appear at a very low energy scale, they only require Standard Model particle content, and they differ fundamentally depending on the Majorana or Dirac nature of the neutrinos. One of the observational signatures is the time- and space-dependence of the neutrino mass matrix, which could be observable in future experiments such as DUNE or in the event of a near-future galactic supernova explosion. Already existing data rules out parts of the parameter space in the Majorana case. The detection of this effect could shed light onto the open question of the Dirac versus Majorana neutrino nature.
The scattering matrix which describes low-energy, non-relativistic scattering of spin-1/2 fermions interacting via finite-range potentials can be obtained from a geometric action principle in which space and time do not appear explicitly arXiv:2011.01278. In the case of zero-range forces, causality leads to constraints on scattering trajectories in the geometric picture. The effect of spatial dimensionality is also investigated by considering scattering in two and three dimensions. In the geometric formulation it is found that dimensionality is encoded in the phase of the harmonic potential that appears in the geometric action.