| > the mass should come from the Higgs mechanism, Correct. That's the pattern we see in quarks, and also applying it to leptons works just fine. In practice, if you are a particle physicist doing calculations which happen to involve neutrinos, and you are not explicitly analyzing the effects of alternative mass generation mechanisms, you use Dirac masses for all fermions. > but that has the problem of, where are all the right-handed neutrinos, then? One of the patterns of the standard model is that only left-handed fermions have weak isospin [1] (the charge of the "weak" nuclear force). Their right-handed counterparts have all the same properties but zero weak isospin; they do not interact via the weak nuclear force. If you take a left-handed neutrino, which only interacts via the weak nuclear force (and gravity), and apply that pattern to get the properties of a right-handed neutrino, what you're left with is a particle with the same mass and no other interactions than gravity. That makes it pretty hard to detect. This is not a "significant modification" of the standard model: it's what you get if you apply the pattern followed by all other fermions. It is sometimes argued that making neutrinos Majorana is more minimalistic, since it reduces the number of particles by eliminating right-handed neutrinos, but that ignores the cost of deviating from the default pattern. In information terms, it would take more bits to encode "use Dirac masses for all fermions except neutrinos, those are Majorana and there are no right-handed ones" than just "use Dirac masses for all fermions". > searches for sterile neutrinos have come up empty Those would be heavy neutrinos which get their mass from physics beyond the standard model. Plain vanilla standard model fermions have the same mass whether they are left- or right-handed, so quite small for neutrinos [2]. > neutrinoless double beta decay remains undetected Those would be a signature of Majorana neutrinos. Both your "contradictions" support the plain vanilla standard model, with all fermions following the same pattern. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weak_isospin [2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neutrino#Properties_and_reacti... |
But that doesn't exactly seem like something it makes a lot of sense to argue over, now that we've identified the disagreement.
> Those would be heavy neutrinos which get their mass from physics beyond the standard model. Plain vanilla standard model fermions have the same mass whether they are left- or right-handed, so quite small for neutrinos [2].
Hm, is that true? I know these experiments can only detect certain mass ranges and IIRC you're right that they were looking for heavier ones, but my understanding was that they were not getting it from physics beyond "standard model plus right-handed neutrinos" (technically beyond the standard model but only a way that is necessary to even discuss the subject!), rather they were just getting it via the ordinary Higgs mechanism? (The bit you linked regarding this doesn't appear to contradict this?) Unless by "beyond the standard model" you just mean that the right-handed mass is different from the left-handed mass, in which case, well, see above, now we're just talking about what "the standard model" normally means.
I mean you say you're a particle physicist, so I guess you'd know -- when you talk to your colleagues, what do they think "the standard model" means with regard to neutrinos? That right-handed ones don't exist? Or that they do exist and have the same mass as their left-handed counterparts? At the very least all the popularizations I've seen (generally written by particle physicists) have said it means the former... you're really sure other particle physicists mean the latter? This may sound a little silly, but have you tried taking like a quick poll or anything to make sure?