The top quark and Higgs boson masses and the stability of the electroweak vacuum
S. Alekhin, A. Djouadi, S. Moch

TL;DR
This paper examines the stability of the electroweak vacuum given the measured Higgs mass of about 126 GeV, emphasizing the importance of precise top quark mass determination through collider data and its implications for vacuum stability.
Contribution
It provides a new, more precise determination of the top quark mass from collider data and assesses its impact on the electroweak vacuum stability constraints.
Findings
The top quark pole mass is estimated at 173.3 ± 2.8 GeV.
Vacuum stability requires Higgs mass ≥ 129.8 ± 5.6 GeV.
Current Higgs mass is compatible with vacuum metastability.
Abstract
The ATLAS and CMS experiments observed a particle at the LHC with a mass GeV, which is compatible with the Higgs boson of the Standard Model. A crucial question is, if for such a Higgs mass value, one could extrapolate the model up to high scales while keeping the minimum of the scalar potential that breaks the electroweak symmetry stable. Vacuum stability requires indeed the Higgs boson mass to be GeV, but the precise value depends critically on the input top quark pole mass which is usually taken to be the one measured at the Tevatron, GeV. However, for an unambiguous and theoretically well-defined determination of the top quark mass one should rather use the total cross section for top quark pair production at hadron colliders. Confronting the latest predictions of the inclusive cross section…
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