What at all is the Higgs of the Standard model and what is the origin of families?
Norma Susana Mankoc Borstnik

TL;DR
This paper questions the assumptions of the Standard Model regarding the Higgs boson and the origin of fermion families, proposing a new theoretical framework involving multiple scalar fields in adjoint representations.
Contribution
It introduces a novel theory where multiple scalar fields in adjoint representations explain the origin of fermion families and the nature of the Higgs boson.
Findings
Proposes scalar fields in adjoint representations as the origin of families.
Challenges the assumption of the Higgs being a fundamental scalar with fermion charges.
Provides a new perspective on the structure of the Standard Model.
Abstract
The standard model of the elementary particles is built on several assumptions. The Higgs is assumed to be a scalar, a boson, with the charges of a fermion (in the fundamental representations of the charge groups). No explanation is offered for the existence of families of fermions -- quarks and leptons-- for the charges of these family members, for the appearance of the Yukawas which take care of fermion properties. The theory explaining the origin of families predicts that several scalar fields with the boson kind of the charges (in the adjoint representations of the charge groups) manifest effectively at low energies as the Higgs and the Yukawas.
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Taxonomy
TopicsInternational Science and Diplomacy · Relativity and Gravitational Theory
