Theory and phenomenology of two-Higgs-doublet models
G. C. Branco, P. M. Ferreira, L. Lavoura, M. N. Rebelo, Marc Sher, and, Joao P. Silva

TL;DR
This paper explores the theoretical frameworks and phenomenological implications of two-Higgs-doublet models, focusing on flavor-changing neutral currents, symmetry considerations, and CP violation mechanisms within these extensions of the Standard Model.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of scalar potentials, flavor control strategies, and CP violation scenarios in two-Higgs-doublet models, including new insights into vacuum stability and minimal CP violation models.
Findings
Controlled flavor-changing neutral currents through specific model types.
Analysis of vacuum stability and CP violation conditions.
Development of minimal models for spontaneous CP violation.
Abstract
We discuss theoretical and phenomenological aspects of two-Higgs-doublet extensions of the Standard Model. In general, these extensions have scalar mediated flavour changing neutral currents which are strongly constrained by experiment. Various strategies are discussed to control these flavour changing scalar currents and their phenomenological consequences are analysed. In particular, scenarios with natural flavour conservation are investigated, including the so-called type I and type II models as well as lepton-specific and inert models. Type III models are then discussed, where scalar flavour changing neutral currents are present at tree level, but are suppressed by either specific ansatze for the Yukawa couplings or by the introduction of family symmetries. We also consider the phenomenology of charged scalars in these models. Next we turn to the role of symmetries in the scalar…
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