What can we learn from the 126 GeV Higgs boson for the Planck scale physics ? - Hierarchy problem and the stability of the vacuum -
Satoshi Iso

TL;DR
This paper explores how the 126 GeV Higgs boson influences Planck scale physics, proposing a B-L extended Standard Model with a flat Higgs potential that addresses the hierarchy problem and explains neutrino oscillations and baryon asymmetry.
Contribution
It introduces a B-L extension of the Standard Model with a flat Higgs potential at the Planck scale, offering an alternative solution to the hierarchy problem and connecting high-scale physics with low-energy phenomena.
Findings
B-L symmetry is radiatively broken at TeV scale via Coleman-Weinberg mechanism.
Electroweak symmetry breaking is triggered by scalar mixing induced by B-L breaking.
The scale ratio is dynamically determined by the B-L gauge coupling.
Abstract
The discovery of the Higgs particle at around 126 GeV has given us a big hint towards the origin of the Higgs potential. The running quartic self-coupling decreases and crosses zero somewhere in the very high energy scale. It is usually considered as a signal of the instability of the standard model (SM) vacuum, but it can also indicate a link between the physics in the electroweak scale and the Planck scale. Furthermore, the LHC experiments as well as the flavor physics experiments give strong constraints on the physics beyond the SM. It urges us to reconsider the widely taken approach to the physics beyond the SM (BSM), namely the approach based on the gauge unification below the Planck scale and the resulting hierarchy problem. Motivated by the recent experiments, we first revisit the hierarchy problem and consider an alternative appoach based on a classical conformality of the SM…
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