Evidence for the Multiverse in the Standard Model and Beyond
Lawrence J. Hall, Yasunori Nomura

TL;DR
This paper introduces a naturalness probability to evaluate the likelihood of observed parameters being close to special values, providing evidence for the multiverse across cosmology, nuclear physics, and electroweak symmetry breaking.
Contribution
It proposes a quantitative measure for naturalness, applies it to multiple physical arenas, and argues that observed unnaturalness supports the multiverse hypothesis.
Findings
Nuclear stability and EWSB are significant naturalness problems.
Multiverse explanations can account for observed parameter values.
LHC data will clarify the naturalness of EWSB.
Abstract
In any theory it is unnatural if the observed parameters lie very close to special values that determine the existence of complex structures necessary for observers. A naturalness probability, P, is introduced to numerically evaluate the unnaturalness. If P is small in all known theories, there is an observer naturalness problem. In addition to the well-known case of the cosmological constant, we argue that nuclear stability and electroweak symmetry breaking (EWSB) represent significant observer naturalness problems. The naturalness probability associated with nuclear stability is conservatively estimated as P_nuc < 10^{-(3-2)}, and for simple EWSB theories P_EWSB < 10^{-(2-1)}. This pattern of unnaturalness in three different arenas, cosmology, nuclear physics, and EWSB, provides evidence for the multiverse. In the nuclear case the problem is largely solved even with a flat multiverse…
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