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Progress of Theoretical Physics Supplement No. 183



Non-Abelian Discrete Symmetries in Particle Physics


By H. Ishimori, T. Kobayashi, H. Ohki, H. Okada, Y. Shimizu and M. Tanimoto

Recently, non-Abelian discrete groups have been playing an important role in particle physics. In particular, several non-Abelian discrete flavor symmetries have been applied in order to understand the flavor structure of quarks and leptons. However, non-Abelian discrete symmetries may not be familar to all of particle physicists (compared with non-Abelian continous symmetries). In this article, we review pedagogically non-Abelian discrete groups and show some applications for physical aspects.

This article includes a brief review on general aspects of group theory in Section 2 and useful theorems in Appendix A. Thus, readers could read it without any expected background knowledge on group theory.

In the sections of concrete non-Abelian discrete groups, we focus on the physically favored or expected groups: SN , AN , T ', DN , QN , Σ(2N 2) , Δ(3N 2) , T7 , Σ(3N 3) and Δ(6N 2), and summarize their conjugacy classes, character tables, irreducible representations, and tensor products, which are important to apply for physics.

To apply for physics, it is important to understand their breaking patterns and anomalies. We show their possible breaking patterns for all groups appearing here, and also review anomalies of general non-Abelian discrete groups. Then, by adapting them to the above concrete groups, we give explicitly anomaly-free conditions. As illustrating examples, we also review concrete models by using A4, S4, and Δ(54) groups. We study how to construct quark- and lepton- mass matrices and derive their predictions based on experiments.

Moreover, it is known that there exist some different types of tensor products for one group. This implies that physical scenarios can be changeable. Here we also show the relation between their tensor products based on S4 and A4 groups in Appendices B and C respectively.

We hope that this review will contribute to further progress of particle physics with non-Abelian discrete groups and also be a useful reference for researchers and graduate students who are interested in this field.


  Copyright © 2012 Progress of Theoretical Physics