Research news on Hypothetical particle physics models

Hypothetical particle physics models constitute a research area focused on constructing and analyzing theoretical frameworks that extend or modify the Standard Model to explain observed anomalies and unresolved phenomena. These models introduce new fields, symmetries, or spacetime structures, often incorporating entities such as supersymmetric partners, extra gauge bosons, axions, or particles arising from extra dimensions or composite dynamics. Research in this area emphasizes internal consistency (renormalizability, unitarity, anomaly cancellation), compatibility with precision measurements and collider bounds, and predictive power for phenomena such as dark matter, neutrino masses, baryogenesis, and flavor structure, using tools from quantum field theory, effective field theories, and numerical simulations.

Tightening the net around the elusive sterile neutrino

Neutrinos, though nearly invisible, are among the most numerous matter particles in the universe. The Standard Model recognizes three types, but the discovery of neutrino oscillations revealed they have mass and can change ...

Could mass arise without the Higgs boson?

The geometry of space, where physical laws unfold, may also hold answers to some of the deepest questions in fundamental physics. The very structure of spacetime might underlie every interaction in nature.

We could use neutrino detectors as giant particle colliders

There is a limit to how big we can build particle colliders on Earth, whether that is because of limited space or limited economics. Since size is equivalent to energy output for particle colliders, that also means there's ...

The gravitino: A new candidate for dark matter

Dark matter remains one of the biggest mysteries in fundamental physics. Many theoretical proposals (axions, WIMPs) and 40 years of extensive experimental searches have failed to provide any explanation of the nature of dark ...

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