Resonance at 125 GeV: Higgs or Dilaton/Radion?
Zackaria Chacko, Roberto Franceschini, Rashmish K. Mishra

TL;DR
This paper explores whether the 125 GeV particle is a dilaton from strong conformal dynamics rather than the Standard Model Higgs, analyzing various models and fitting current experimental data.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of dilaton scenarios from technicolor and pNGB models, including conformal symmetry breaking effects, and compares them to the SM Higgs using experimental data.
Findings
Both technicolor and pNGB dilaton models fit current data well.
Distinct parameters can differentiate dilaton models from the SM Higgs.
Future experiments can test and distinguish these scenarios.
Abstract
We consider the possibility that the new particle that has been observed at 125 GeV is not the Standard Model (SM) Higgs, but instead the dilaton associated with an approximate conformal symmetry that has been spontaneously broken. We focus on dilatons that arise from theories of technicolor, or from theories of the Higgs as a pseudo-Nambu-Goldstone boson (pNGB), that involve strong conformal dynamics in the ultraviolet. In the pNGB case, we are considering a framework where the Higgs particle is significantly heavier than the dilaton and has therefore not yet been observed. In each of the technicolor and pNGB scenarios, we study both the case when the SM fermions and gauge bosons are elementary, and the case when they are composites of the strongly interacting sector. Our analysis incorporates conformal symmetry violating effects, which are necessarily present since the dilaton is not…
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