
TL;DR
This paper discusses the flavor problem in particle physics, focusing on how the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) can provide insights into the masses and mixings of quarks and leptons, which are not well understood.
Contribution
It highlights specific flavor questions and proposes how LHC experiments can address these unresolved issues in the Standard Model.
Findings
Identification of key flavor questions for LHC investigation
Proposals for experimental approaches to study flavor physics at LHC
Insights into how LHC data can inform the flavor problem
Abstract
The physics underlying quark and lepton masses and mixings (the "flavor problem") is the least well understood aspect of the Standard Model. Some questions of flavor physics, and ways in which the LHC can help shed light on this problem, are described.
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