Tuesdays 10:30 - 11:30 | Fridays 11:30 - 12:30
Showing votes from 2021-08-20 12:30 to 2021-08-24 11:30 | Next meeting is Friday Apr 25th, 11:30 am.
We consider the possibility that the gauge hierarchy is a byproduct of the metastability of the electroweak vacuum, i.e., that whatever mechanism is responsible for the latter also sets the running Higgs mass to a value smaller than its natural value by many orders of magnitude. This perspective is motivated by the early-time framework for eternal inflation put forth recently, which favors vacua that are relatively short-lived, but applies more generally to any theoretical approach predicting that our vacuum should be metastable. We find that the metastability of the electroweak vacuum, together with the requirement that such a non-trivial vacuum exists, requires the Higgs mass to be smaller than the instability scale by around one order of magnitude. While this bound is quite weak in the Standard Model (SM), as the instability scale is $\sim 10^{11}$ GeV, simple and well-motivated extensions of the SM - concretely, the $\nu$MSM with an approximate $B-\tilde{L}$ symmetry and the minimal SU(4)/Sp(4) composite Higgs model - can significantly tighten the bound by lowering the instability scale. We find that the bound can be brought down to $\simeq 10$ TeV where our perturbative treatment of the decay rate becomes unreliable. Our results imply that, assuming the SM symmetry breaking pattern, small running Higgs masses are a universal property of theories giving rise to metastability, suggesting a common origin of the two underlying fine-tunings and providing a strong constraint on any attempt to explain metastability.
Some time ago it was pointed out that the presence of cosmological components could affect the propagation of gravitational waves (GW) beyond the usual cosmological redshift and that such effects might be observable in pulsar timing arrays. These analyses were done at leading order in the Hubble constant $H_0$, which is proportional to $\Lambda^{1/2}$ and $\rho_i^{1/2}$ ($\rho_i$ being the various cosmological fluid densities). In this work, we study in detail the propagation of metric perturbations on a Schwarzschild-de Sitter (SdS) background, close to the place where GW are produced, and obtain solutions that incorporate corrections linear in $\rho_i$ and $\Lambda$. At the next-to-leading order the corrections do not appear in the form of $H_0$ thus lifting the degeneracy among the various cosmological components. We also determine the leading corrections proportional to the mass of the final object; they are very small for the distances considered in pulsar timing arrays but may be of relevance in other cases. When transformed into comoving coordinates, the ones used in cosmological measurements, this SdS solution does satisfy the perturbation equations in a Friedmann-Lema\^itre-Robertson-Walker metric up to and including $\Lambda^{3/2}$ terms. This analysis is then extended to the other cosmological fluids, allowing us to consider GW sources in the Gpc range. Finally, we investigate the influence of these corrections in pulsar timing arrays observations.