Gauging the accidental symmetries of the Standard Model, and implications for the flavour anomalies
Wolfgang Altmannshofer, Joe Davighi, Marco Nardecchia

TL;DR
This paper investigates how accidental symmetries in the Standard Model can be gauged through $U(1)$ extensions, explaining flavor anomalies in B-meson decays while satisfying various experimental constraints.
Contribution
It introduces a class of $U(1)$ gauge extensions with augmented fermion content that can naturally explain flavor anomalies and prevent lepton flavor violation.
Findings
Models can explain $R_{K^{(*)}}$ and B anomaly data.
Flavor universality violation arises from vector-like couplings.
Models satisfy constraints from LHC, meson mixing, and electroweak tests.
Abstract
We explore the possibility that lepton family numbers and baryon number are such good symmetries of Nature because they are the global remnant of a spontaneously broken gauge symmetry. An almost arbitrary linear combination of these symmetries (together with a component of global hypercharge) can be consistently gauged, if the Standard Model (SM) fermion content is augmented by three chiral SM singlet states. Within this framework of extensions of the SM one generically expects flavour non-universality to emerge in the charged leptons, in such a way that naturally prevents lepton flavour violation, by aligning the mass and weak eigenbases. For quarks, all the SM Yukawa couplings responsible for their observed masses and mixings arise at the renormalisable level. We perform fits to show that models in this class can explain and the other neutral current …
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