11–13 May 2026
University of Pittsburgh
US/Eastern timezone

Matter Unification and Lepton Flavor Violation

11 May 2026, 15:00
15m
David Lawrence Hall 203, University of Pittsburgh

David Lawrence Hall 203, University of Pittsburgh

Speaker

Hridoy Debnath

Description

We explore the idea of quark–lepton unification at low energies. In particular, we discuss the minimal framework for matter unification at the multi-TeV scale, in which neutrino masses are necessarily generated via the inverse seesaw mechanism. To assess the testability of this theory for physics beyond the Standard Model, we analyze current experimental constraints and derive the corresponding lower bound on the symmetry-breaking scale. We reexamine the impact of existing limits from lepton number violating meson decays, taking into account the freedom associated with unknown quark–lepton mixing angles. Furthermore, we study the correlation between bounds from meson decays and $\mu \to e$ conversion. We demonstrate that the upcoming $\mu \to e$ conversion experiment at Fermilab can play a crucial role in probing quark–lepton unification at the multi-TeV scale.

Authors

Hridoy Debnath Pavel Fileviez Perez

Presentation materials

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