Speaker
Jonathan Kriewald
(IJS)
Description
The discovery of neutrino oscillations is the first laboratory evidence of New Physics beyond the Standard Model.
Oscillating neutrinos necessarily imply that neutrinos are massive and that (neutral) lepton flavour is violated.
A signal of charged lepton flavour violation (cLFV) however so far eludes experimental discovery.
In this talk I will review some phenomenological implications of current experimental bounds (and future sensitivities) on charged lepton flavour violating processes as well as potential future discoveries.
In connection to neutrino masses I will also highlight some phenomenological implications of leptonic CP violation on cLFV observables.
Primary author
Jonathan Kriewald
(IJS)