Left-right gauge symmetry and an "isoconjugate" model ofCPviolation

Abstract
Left-right symmetry in the starting gauge interactions provides the basis for an "isoconjugate" model of CP violation with the consequence that η+=η00. The magnitude of CP violation is naturally suppressed at least to the extent that V+A interactions are suppressed in nature compared to the VA interactions. This allows the possibility that intrinsic CP-violating phase (arising through spontaneous symmetry breaking, for example) may have a maximal character, which may reveal itself at intermediate high energies to possibly disappear at still higher energies. CP violation in leptonic, semileptonic, and ΔY=0 parity-violating nonleptonic interactions (which could contribute to the electric dipole moment of the neutron) arise on the one hand in fourth order of the weak gauge interactions and on the other via Yukawa interactions between fermions and leftover Higgs mesons as well as via WLWR mixing. The magnitude of the latter contributions may be limited to be less than or of order GF×104 in order that the experimentally observed relation η+=η00 may hold at least to a few percent. Thus the electric dipole moment of the neutron dn is expected to be less than or of order 1024e cm. CP violation in all |ΔS|=1 nonleptonic decays (YN+π, etc.) should, in general, have the same order of magnitude as |η+|.