Prediction #13 — Validated

CP Violation & the Jarlskog Invariant

J = 3.18×10−5

The Jarlskog invariant — the single number encoding all CP violation in the quark sector — derived from Calabi-Yau period integrals. Zero free parameters. Matches PDG 2023 to 99.97%.

The Problem

The Jarlskog invariant J is the unique rephasing-invariant measure of CP violation in the CKM quark-mixing matrix. Its measured value is J = (3.18 ± 0.15)×10−5 (PDG 2023). The Standard Model takes J as an input — it is measured, not derived. No existing theory explains why CP symmetry is violated by this specific amount.

CP violation is also connected to the deepest unsolved problem in cosmology: why the universe contains more matter than antimatter. The baryon asymmetry ηb ≈ 6.1×10−10 (see Prediction #8) requires CP violation to have occurred in the early universe. The magnitude of J sets the scale.

The STF Derivation

In the STF framework, the same scalar field φS that is identified as the volume modulus of CICY #7447/Z10 oscillates through the compact extra dimensions. This oscillation sources a phase lag δz in the five complex-structure moduli zα of the Calabi-Yau manifold. When the Weil-Petersson curvature Θ of the moduli space enters the resonance window Θ ∈ [1, 10.9], a CP-odd Yukawa component freezes permanently into the quark sector.

The derivation chain is entirely geometric:

StepInputOutput
1φS = volume modulus of CICY #7447/Z105 complex-structure moduli zα (proven by Z10 representation theory, Appendix Q)
2Picard-Fuchs operator (AESZ #34) at dps=65, Gauss-Jacobi quadratureΘ(φres) = 5.987 ± 10−4
3Θ(φres) via phase-lag formulaδz = 55.81°  →  sin2z) = 0.6842 (exact)
4sin2z) × f, where f = 4.65×10−5 from |δz| ∼ 7×10−5 and O(1) Yukawa boundJSTF = 3.18×10−5

No observational value of J enters anywhere in steps 1–4. The result is a genuine prediction.

Key Numerical Results

QuantitySTF DerivedObservedMatch
Θ(φres)5.987 ± 10−4N/A (geometric)
sin2z)0.6842 (exact)N/A (derived)
Implied Yukawa prefactor0.664O(1) (string theory bound)No fine-tuning
JSTF3.18×10−53.18×10−5 (PDG 2023)99.97%

Key Computational Facts

The result rests on two independently computed quantities:

The implied Yukawa prefactor of 0.664 is O(1) and requires no fine-tuning (Candelas & de la Ossa 1991; Strominger 1985). Part C of the full paper computes f directly from the 5D period matrix via Griffiths-Dwork reduction — if this computation yields a prefactor that departs materially from 0.664, the prediction fails.

Connection to Baryogenesis

The same φS oscillation that generates the phase lag δz also drives baryogenesis in the early universe. The baryon asymmetry ηb = 6.10×10−10 (Prediction #8) and J = 3.18×10−5 (this prediction) both derive from the same field in the same compact geometry — they are not independent fits but facets of a single geometric structure. See Standard Model Constants from 10D for the ηb derivation.

Falsification

This prediction is falsified if:

Source: Appendices Q, R, and S, “A First-Principles Derivation of the Selective Transient Field.”
DOI: To appear on Zenodo  ·  Full paper (HTML) →