Helicity interactions of the Z0

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    Helicity Interactions
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SUMMARY

The discussion focuses on the helicity interactions of the Z0 boson, specifically in the context of muon (anti)neutrino scattering off electrons. Participants analyze the contributions of left-handed (LH) and right-handed (RH) states in the differential cross-section (C.S.) equations, emphasizing the role of coupling constants g_L and g_R. A key point raised is the distinction between charged and neutral current interactions, with clarification that the Z0 does not couple to charged currents. The conversation concludes with a request for confirmation on the correctness of the derived equations and the implications of particle-antiparticle interactions.

PREREQUISITES
  • Understanding of particle physics, specifically the Standard Model.
  • Familiarity with helicity and chirality concepts in quantum field theory.
  • Knowledge of differential cross-section calculations in particle interactions.
  • Experience with the properties of neutrinos and their interactions with electrons.
NEXT STEPS
  • Study the role of the Z0 boson in electroweak interactions.
  • Learn about the mathematical formulation of neutral current interactions.
  • Investigate the implications of helicity conservation in particle collisions.
  • Explore the differences between charged and neutral current processes in detail.
USEFUL FOR

Particle physicists, researchers in quantum field theory, and students studying the Standard Model of particle physics will benefit from this discussion.

bayners123
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The Z0 is a linear combination of W0 and B0 bosons, so unlike the charged current interaction it can interact with both handednesses (is that a word). In the search to quantify this mixing, people measured the cross section for muon (anti)neutrinos to scatter off electrons. This is a reaction that can only happen via neutral currents.

Consider the neutrino case. It's LH, because all neutrinos are. The electrons are an equal mix of RH and LH states. If you look at the interaction, it's proportional to the following:

\bar{\nu} \left( g_R \frac{(1-\gamma^5)}{2} + g_L \frac{(1+\gamma^5)}{2} \right) e

Now according to my book, in the final C.S. these pick up factors according to spin rotation matrices:

\frac{\mathrm{d}\sigma}{\mathrm{d}y} \propto g_L^2 (1-y)^2 + g_R^2

Fine.

However, if the neutrino is LH (so appears in this vertex in the same way as a RH antineutrino) then why is there a RH antineutrino x RH electron term? In other words:

\bar{\nu}_{RH} [ g_R P_R + g_L P_L ] (e_{RH} + e_{LH}) \\<br /> = \bar{\nu}_{RH} [ g_R P_R^2 + g_L P_L^2 ] (e_{RH} + e_{LH}) \\<br /> = \bar{\nu}_{RH} [ g_R P_L^\dagger P_R + g_L P_R^\dagger P_L ] (e_{RH} + e_{LH}) \\<br /> = g_R \bar{\nu}_{RH} P_L^\dagger e_{RH} + g_L \bar{\nu}_{RH} P_R^\dagger e_{LH} \\<br /> = 0 + g_L \bar{\nu}_{RH} e_{LH}<br />

So the g_R \bar{\nu}_{RH} e_{RH} term disappears to 0. How then is there a term proportional to g_R^2 in the differential C.S. equation?

Thanks!
 
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bayners123 said:
If you look at the interaction, it's proportional to the following:

\bar{\nu} \left( g_R \frac{(1-\gamma^5)}{2} + g_L \frac{(1+\gamma^5)}{2} \right) e
Looks to me like you've written a charged current, not a neutral current. This would not couple to the Z0. Especially if you intend that to be a muon neutrino, there's a problem!
 
Bill_K said:
Looks to me like you've written a charged current, not a neutral current. This would not couple to the Z0.

OK, right I think I'm understanding this a little better. So what I should have written, for muon-electron scattering, is:

\bar{\psi}_{\nu_\mu} \left[ g_R^{\nu_\mu} \frac{(1-\gamma^5)}{2} + g_L^{\nu_\mu} \frac{(1+\gamma^5)}{2} \right] \psi_{\nu_\mu}
multiplied by the term for the electron vertex:
\bar{\psi}_{e^-} \left[ g_R^e \frac{(1-\gamma^5)}{2} + g_L^e \frac{(1+\gamma^5)}{2} \right] \psi_{e^-} <br />

Is this correct?

So this should give (for the real neutrino) that only LH e -> LH e or RH e -> RH e is ok and the other terms go.

Compare with the neutrino-antineutrino -> electron anti-electron case for which the electron vertex is:
\bar{\psi}_{e^+} \left[ g_R^e \frac{(1-\gamma^5)}{2} + g_L^e \frac{(1+\gamma^5)}{2} \right] \psi_{e^-} <br />
in which we should find that only RH e+, LH e- or LH e+, RH e- is allowed.

Firstly, have I got both of these right? Secondly, how is it that the first current gives LH,LH & RH,RH but the second give LH,RH & RH,LH? I assume this must be to do with the fact that it's a conjugate wavefunction for an antiparticle rather than a particle but what's the mathematical detail to this?

Thanks again!
 

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