10–16 Jul 2016
ICISE
Asia/Ho_Chi_Minh timezone
XIIth Rencontres du Vietnam, ICISE, Quy Nhon, Vietnam

$\mu^-e^-\rightarrow e^-e^-$ in muonic atoms

12 Jul 2016, 12:45
20m
ICISE

ICISE

Quy Nhon, Vietnam
Precision Experiments and "Low­energy" Probes of Physics Beyond the Standard Model Parallel IV

Speaker

Mr Yuichi UESAKA (Osaka University)

Description

The charged lepton flavor violating (CLFV) processes of $\mu^-e^-\rightarrow e^-e^-$ decay by four Fermi contact interactions in a muonic atom for various atoms are investigated. The wave functions of bound and scattering state leptons are properly treated by solving Dirac equations with Coulomb interaction of the finite nuclear charge distributions. This new effect contributes significantly in particular for heavier atoms, where the obtained decay rate is about one order of magnitude larger than the previous estimation for $^{208}$Pb. We find that, as the atomic number $Z$ increases, the $\mu^-e^-\rightarrow e^-e^-$ decay rates increase more rapidly than the result of the previous work of $Z^3$, suggesting this decay as one of the promising processes to search for CLFV interaction.

Summary

The charged lepton flavor violating (CLFV) processes of $\mu^-e^-\rightarrow e^-e^-$ decay by four Fermi contact interactions in a muonic atom for various atoms are investigated. The wave functions of bound and scattering state leptons are properly treated by solving Dirac equations with Coulomb interaction of the finite nuclear charge distributions. This new effect contributes significantly in particular for heavier atoms, where the obtained decay rate is about one order of magnitude larger than the previous estimation for $^{208}$Pb. We find that, as the atomic number $Z$ increases, the $\mu^-e^-\rightarrow e^-e^-$ decay rates increase more rapidly than the result of the previous work of $Z^3$, suggesting this decay as one of the promising processes to search for CLFV interaction.

Primary author

Mr Yuichi UESAKA (Osaka University)

Co-authors

Prof. Joe SATO (Saitama University) Dr Masato YAMANAKA (Nagoya University) Prof. Toru SATO (Osaka University) Prof. Yoshitaka KUNO (Osaka University)

Presentation materials