TriTertButoxy said:
I also thought I had an answer to this question but I now doubt it is correct:
Recall that one possible resolution of the strong CP problem is that one of the quarks have a vanishing mass parameter (with the up quark being the best candidate). Lattice simulations indicate that not even the up quark is massless, so the strong CP problem isn't resolved.
As far the weak anolog of the problem is concerned, recall that neutrinos are massless in the Standard Model. I thought this would resolve the weak anolog of the CP problem. However, by the turn of the millennium, neutrinos were found to oscillate, implying them to have a small mass. However, this didn't seem to raise the issue about the weak CP problem, so something else must be at work...
It's a little more subtle than that, I think. Let me try to repeat the argument that lives on the surface of my brain, with the caveat that it's only the surface thoughts I'm talking about here...
The reason why the strong CP problem is a "problem" is that you cannot set \theta_{\rm QCD}=0 naturally, since the
physical phase is actually
\theta_{\rm QCD}+{\rm Arg~det}M
so as long as you write down the most general Yukawa couplings (and why wouldn't you?) you will always get the effective vacuum angle to be nonzero, unless the Yukawa's have real determinant. This relationship follows from an instanton calculation and is related to the fact that the axial symmetry is anomalous.
So far, all facts. My confused memory is saying something like, SU(2)_W vacuum angle does not have this kind of relationship. Recall that QCD has a U(3)xU(3) vectorlike symmetry that is broken by a quark condensate (the chiral Lagrangian story) and the U(1)_A lives inside this symmetry group. EW does not have this kind of symmetry structure, so I'm not sure how it works.
All still very vague, but I think that's how the argument goes. Again, take all this with a grain of salt. But I don't think the neutrinos are the key. I think is has more to do with how there is only one vacuum angle, and we can always choose it to be the QCD angle by suitable axial field redefinitions.
Enough rambling. Hope this helps (and doesn't make things worse!).