1. Introduction
The neutrino is an elementary particle of the standard model of particle physics. It’s a fermion of spin 1/2. The existence of the neutrino was postulated by Pauli in 1930, in order to explain the non-conservation of energy in beta decay, but its experimental discovery did not occur until 1956, when Reins and Cowan revealed the interactions of neutrinos from the Savannah River nuclear reactor [1] [2].
The study of the properties of neutrinos still presents many unsolved problems, and in particular the fundamental question on the mass of the neutrinos. In this context, the study of neutrino oscillations plays a privileged role, because their observation implies a non-zero mass. Oscillations are the key to solving different experimental observations, such as the problem of solar neutrinos. In 1962, the muonic neutrino
is discovered at Brookhaven and the tau neutrino
in 2000 at DONUT experiment. In 1990, the LEP at CERN shows that there are three families of light neutrinos (mass ≤ 45 GeV):
,
and
. Some experiments, notably that of Super-Kamiokande in 1998 (Nobel Prize in 2002 on this occasion), have shown that neutrinos can, through a phenomenon called neutrino oscillation, be continuously transformed from one form of flavor (electronic, muonic or tau) into another. The discovery of this phenomenon made it possible to provide a solution to the problem of solar neutrinos [3] [4].
With this in mind, in the current context, starting from the above introduction, this paper is organized as follows: In Section 2 we introduce the Dirac lagrangian and the corresponding equations of motion. Then in Section 3 we explain the Majorana spinor in addition to the difference with Dirac spinor. In Section 4, we shall explore and discuss the neutrino mass term with a detailed calculation. In Section 5, we will show and derive the equations of the See-Saw mechanism, and Section 6 is devoted to our conclusions.
2. The Dirac Equation
Dirac’s equation is a relativistic quantum mechanics equation that describes half-integer spin particles [5]. The Dirac lagrangian is given by:
(1)
where
,
is the Dirac matrix which is a Lorentz vector
,
and
, where
are Pauli matrices.
From now on, the 4-dimensional unit matrix and the vector (x) of Minkowski space-time will not be marked. One can divide this lagrangian into a kinetic term and another massive term:
(2)
From this Lagrangian, valid for a global symmetry
, we can use the Euler-Lagrange equation to obtain the Dirac equation and its conjugate.
For
:
(3)
where
and
; we then obtain the conjugate Dirac equation:
(4)
For
:
(5)
we obtain the Dirac equation:
(6)
3. Majorana Spinors
It is a fermionic type particle which is its own antiparticle. The neutrino could be either a Majorana or Dirac particle. This implies that the spinor
is related to its conjugate
. In fact, the equation
is not Lorentz invariant, then the solution is to use the charge conjugate spinor [3] [4] [6]. This gives a definition of Majorana Fermions compatible with the Lorentz invariance:
(7)
then, using the Majorana representation [5] and the charge conjugate matrix1, C, we obtain:
(8)
and
then for
, we obtain
. Hence the four components of the Majorana spinor are real, and it has half the degrees of freedom of a Dirac spinor.
4. The Massive Neutrino
4.1. Mass Terms
Charged leptons and quarks, i.e. all fermions of the standard model of particle physics apart from the neutrinos, are Dirac particles. It is tempting to think that neutrinos are too. A 4-component Dirac spinor represents the particle and the antiparticle, each in the states of left and right chirality respectively. When a neutrino is considered massless, the standard model doesn’t contain the right chirality field
, but only the left chirality field
. So, in order to introduce the mass of the neutrino as the mass of the introduced quarks, we add
to the model [6] [7].
Starting from the massive term of Dirac lagrangian,
, and knowing that
, then
since
.
Using the proprieties of the projection operator and the
matrices, we obtain
and
.
Then
, so
.
That’s give the Dirac term where
is a constant. Consequently, one can construct the Dirac mass term:
(9)
can be written in matrix form:
(10)
where
is a complex
matrix. This term is invariant under the global transformation
:
(11)
where the phase
is the same for all neutrinos and all charged leptons. This implies the conservation of the total leptonic number L. Thus, L is the quantum number which distinguishes a neutrino from an antineutrino.
A massive fermion must have both left and right components:
. However there are two possibilities: in a case, the right component is completely independent of the left component, we then have a Dirac field. In a second case, the right field is the conjugate of the left field:
(12)
where
is charge conjugate operator (particle-antiparticle).
Using the proprieties of commutation of Dirac
matrices, we show that the operator
applied to a chiral field toggles its chirality:
(13)
then
(14)
Once
is added to the model description, we introduce the Majorana mass term:
(15)
where
is another constant. This term mix
and
and doesn’t conserve the leptonic number L.
Note that there is a very important difference between the Dirac and Majorana terms. While the first preserves the electric charges, the baryonic and leptonic numbers; the second (i.e. Majorana term) violates the conservation of all additive quantum numbers of two units.
Since the electric charge is exactly conserved, this means that no charged particle can be of Majorana type. So among all fermions, only neutrinos can be described by Majorana fields, and in this case the leptonic number will be violated.
4.2. Partners of Neutrino Masses
The Dirac term, already introduced, conserves the fermionic numbers
(16)
and gives equal masses for particles and antiparticles
. For particles obeying
symmetry, such as the electromagnetic charge, it’s clear that
is the only possible mass term. Then, to conserve
symmetry, we always need a particle-antiparticle interaction [8].
Since neutrinos do not have electromagnetic charges, it is possible to introduce another mass term that contains two fields of neutrinos (or antineutrinos). The general mass term contains then the Dirac mass term in addition to the Majorana term which has a left and right contributions [9]. It can be written in the following form:
(17)
The mass matrices
,
and
are Lorentz scalars.
•
is the Dirac mass.
•
and
violate the fermionic number, they are called Majorana mass.
The
matrix in the Majorana mass term is used to conserve Lorentz invariance2. The matrix C is necessary for the invariance of Dirac equation under a charge conjugation:
. In general C depends on the base of the used
matrices. For the Majorana base, the
matrices are purely imaginary, so
.
is related to C by:
(18)
The reason that
appears in Equation (17) is to connect the conjugate charge field
to
and
.
We have:
and
, then
(19)
5. The See-Saw Mechanism
5.1. General Framework
The Equation (17) describes the general mass term of neutrinos with three matrices of different masses
,
and
of dimension
since we have three flavors of neutrinos [9] [10]. This equation becomes more symmetrical if we replace the transpose field by the conjugate charge field. Using Equation (19), we obtain
, then
(20)
(21)
Using these equations, the Equation (17) can be written with the following compact form:
(22)
For the 3 generations of neutrinos, the 6 eigenstates of mass
are eigenvalues of the
matrix
(23)
M is not necessarily Hermitian, so its diagonalization requires a bi-unitary transformation:
(24)
where
and
are
matrices. This diagonalization is accomplished with a change of base:
(25)
to obtain a new set of fields
and
defined by:
(26)
5.2. Problem Simplification
We can simplify our problem by working on a single neutrino family [11]. Suppose that
and
, so the
matrix M will be written as:
(27)
Calculating the eigenvalues of M:
but
,
therefore the eigenvalues of M are
and
. Then the spectrum divides into a heavy neutrino of approximate mass
and another light neutrino of mass
. This is the See-Saw mechanism.
is of the mass order of a charged lepton
and
large in front of
to give small masses to the neutrinos. The
matrix M is diagonalized by the orthogonal matrix
(28)
so the two eigenstates of mass of the two neutrinos are:
(29)
(30)
We note that the two eigenstates of mass
and
are Majorana states:
(31)
(32)
The state
which undergoes essentially the weak interactions is
; it is the state associated to the eigenstate of the light neutrino
:
(33)
The right neutrino
is the eigenstate of the heavy neutrino
,
:
(34)
This example can be generalized by neglecting the matrix
(its eigenvalues are negligible), then the neutrino mass matrix takes the form:
(35)
If
, then we also obtain a spectrum which separates into a light neutrino and a heavy one. The light neutrino has a
light mass matrix:
(36)
and the heavy neutrino:
(37)
The eigenstates obtained are of Majorana type. The eigenvalues of mass for the left neutrinos are given by:
(38)
where
is the mass of a quark or a charged lepton of generation k. The left neutrino acquires a mass inversely proportional to the mass of the right neutrino. So the See-Saw mechanism explains, not only, the small mass of the left neutrinos, but it also introduces massive Majorana-type neutrinos.
6. Conclusion
In the present work we derived the Dirac equation for neutrinos, which represents a relativistic quantum mechanics equation that describes half-integer spin particles. Then we introduced the concept of Majorana neutrinos using the charge conjugate operator. After that, we calculated in details the general mass terms for both types of neutrinos. Finally, we presented the general idea of the See-Saw mechanism and we calculated the mass eigenstates of the Dirac and Majorana neutrinos. We also explained how a spectrum separates into a light and heavy neutrinos.
NOTES
1Charge conjugate matrix: This matrix is used to define the charge conjugate spinor
. C is defined within a phase factor,
.
2
is different from the operator
which explain how a Dirac field transform under a charge conjugation.