Abstract Hierarchical masses of quarks and leptons are addressed by imposing horizontal symmetries. In supersymmetric Standard Models, the same symmetries play a role in suppressing flavor violating processes induced by supersymmetric particles. Combining the idea of spontaneous CP violation to control contributions to electric dipole moments (EDMs), the mass scale of supersymmetric particles can be lowered. We present supersymmetric models with U(1) horizontal symmetries and discuss CP and flavor constraints. Models with two U(1) symmetries are found to give a viable solution to the muon g − 2 anomaly. Interestingly, the parameter space to explain the anomaly will be probed by future electron EDM experiments
Abstract One of the greatest challenges for models of b → s anomalies is the necessity to produce a ...
Rather than sticking to the full U(3)(3) approximate symmetry normally invoked in Minimal Flavour Vi...
We construct explicit examples with a horizontal, ``anomalous'' U(1) gauge group, which, in a supers...
Abstract We study the contributions of supersymmetric models with a U(1) horizontal symmetry and onl...
Models that combine Abelian horizontal symmetries and spontaneous CP violation can (i) explain the s...
Models that combine Abelian horizontal symmetries and spontaneous CP violation can (i) explain the s...
The smallness of the quark sector parameters and the hierarchy between them could be the result of a...
Abstract We discuss gauge mediated supersymmetry breaking models which explain the observed muon ano...
Rather than sticking to the full U(3)3 approximate symmetry normally invoked in Minimal Flavour Viol...
The heaviness of the third family fermions and the experimental absence of large flavor violating pr...
Abstract The recent experimental status, including the confirmation of the muon g − 2 anomaly at Fer...
Supersymmetry provides the most promising solution to the gauge hierarchy problem. For supersymmetry...
The supersymmetric CP problem is studied within superstring-motivated extensions of the MSSM with an...
The muon g−2 anomaly is a long-standing discrepancy from its standard model prediction. The recent i...
AbstractIt is shown that using non-Abelian horizontal gauge symmetry and anomalous U(1)A symmetry in...
Abstract One of the greatest challenges for models of b → s anomalies is the necessity to produce a ...
Rather than sticking to the full U(3)(3) approximate symmetry normally invoked in Minimal Flavour Vi...
We construct explicit examples with a horizontal, ``anomalous'' U(1) gauge group, which, in a supers...
Abstract We study the contributions of supersymmetric models with a U(1) horizontal symmetry and onl...
Models that combine Abelian horizontal symmetries and spontaneous CP violation can (i) explain the s...
Models that combine Abelian horizontal symmetries and spontaneous CP violation can (i) explain the s...
The smallness of the quark sector parameters and the hierarchy between them could be the result of a...
Abstract We discuss gauge mediated supersymmetry breaking models which explain the observed muon ano...
Rather than sticking to the full U(3)3 approximate symmetry normally invoked in Minimal Flavour Viol...
The heaviness of the third family fermions and the experimental absence of large flavor violating pr...
Abstract The recent experimental status, including the confirmation of the muon g − 2 anomaly at Fer...
Supersymmetry provides the most promising solution to the gauge hierarchy problem. For supersymmetry...
The supersymmetric CP problem is studied within superstring-motivated extensions of the MSSM with an...
The muon g−2 anomaly is a long-standing discrepancy from its standard model prediction. The recent i...
AbstractIt is shown that using non-Abelian horizontal gauge symmetry and anomalous U(1)A symmetry in...
Abstract One of the greatest challenges for models of b → s anomalies is the necessity to produce a ...
Rather than sticking to the full U(3)(3) approximate symmetry normally invoked in Minimal Flavour Vi...
We construct explicit examples with a horizontal, ``anomalous'' U(1) gauge group, which, in a supers...