Quark Masses: An Environmental Impact Statement
Robert L. Jaffe, Alejandro Jenkins, Itamar Kimchi

TL;DR
This paper explores how varying quark masses affect the stability of nuclei and the potential for life-supporting worlds, classifying conditions under which stable nuclei and organic chemistry could exist.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of the parameter space of quark masses, identifying regions that allow for stable nuclei and potential habitability, independent of anthropic assumptions.
Findings
Identifies a 29 MeV wide band of congeniality for two light quarks with specific charges.
Discovers a less robust congenial region with one light and two heavier quarks.
Determines conditions where nuclei involve three or more baryon species.
Abstract
We investigate worlds that lie on a slice through the parameter space of the Standard Model over which quark masses vary. We allow as many as three quarks to participate in nuclei, while fixing the mass of the electron and the average mass of the lightest baryon flavor multiplet. We classify as "congenial" worlds that satisfy the environmental constraint that the quark masses allow for stable nuclei with charges one, six, and eight, making organic chemistry possible. Whether a congenial world actually produces observers depends on a multitude of historical contingencies, beginning with primordial nucleosynthesis, which we do not explore. Such constraints may be independently superimposed on our results. Environmental constraints such as the ones we study may be combined with information about the a priori distribution of quark masses over the landscape of possible universes to determine…
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