The 125 GeV Higgs and Electroweak Phase Transition Model Classes
Daniel J. H. Chung, Andrew J. Long, Lian-Tao Wang

TL;DR
This paper classifies models of the electroweak phase transition in light of the 125 GeV Higgs discovery, constraining their viability and exploring phenomenological implications for baryogenesis and collider signals.
Contribution
It introduces a classification scheme for electroweak phase transition models and analyzes how recent Higgs measurements constrain these classes.
Findings
Models relying on thermal loop effects are highly constrained.
Tree-level models with light singlets face restrictions from decay and mixing constraints.
Enhanced symmetry points are often phenomenologically disfavored.
Abstract
Recently, the ATLAS and CMS detectors have discovered a bosonic particle which, to a reasonable degree of statistical uncertainty, fits the profile of the Standard Model Higgs. One obvious implication is that models which predict a significant departure from Standard Model phenomenology, such as large exotic (e.g., invisible) Higgs decay or mixing with a hidden sector scalar, are already ruled out. This observation threatens the viability of electroweak baryogenesis, which favors, for example, a lighter Higgs and a Higgs coupled to or mixed with light scalars. To assess the broad impact of these constraints, we propose a scheme for classifying models of the electroweak phase transition and impose constraints on a class-by-class basis. We find that models, such as the MSSM, which rely on thermal loop effects are severely constrained by the measurement of a 125 GeV Higgs. Models which…
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