The Framed Standard Model (II) - A first Test against Experiment
HM Chan (Rutherford Appleton Laboratory), ST Tsou (Mathematical, Institute, Oxford University)

TL;DR
The paper tests the Framed Standard Model's predictions against experimental data, showing it can accurately reproduce many known quantities with fewer parameters than the traditional Standard Model.
Contribution
It provides a quantitative test of the FSM, reducing the number of free parameters and successfully fitting multiple experimental measurements.
Findings
Good agreement with experimental data for multiple quantities
Reduction of standard model parameters from 17 to 7
Successful prediction of unmeasured quantities
Abstract
Apart from the qualitative features described in \cite{chm}, the renormalization group equation derived for the rotation of the fermion mass matrices are amenable to quantitative study. The equation depends on a coupling and a fudge factor and, on integration, on 3 integration constants. Its application to data analysis, however, requires the input from experiment of the heaviest generation masses all of which are known, except for . Together then with the theta-angle in the QCD action, there are in all 7 real unknown parameters. Determining these 7 parameters by fitting to the experimental values of the masses , the CKM elements , and the neutrino oscillation angle , one can then calculate and compare with experiment the following 12 other quantities $m_s, m_u/m_d, |V_{ud}|, |V_{cs}|,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsScientific Research and Discoveries · Particle physics theoretical and experimental studies · Geophysics and Gravity Measurements
