Is a Higgs Vacuum Instability Fatal for High-Scale Inflation?
John Kearney, Hojin Yoo, Kathryn M. Zurek

TL;DR
This paper investigates whether Higgs vacuum instability during high-scale inflation can end inflation or produce cosmological defects, concluding that inflation generally continues despite the instability, with some patches possibly forming defects.
Contribution
It extends previous Higgs inflation analyses by applying a gauge-invariant, perturbative approach to show that Higgs instability does not necessarily terminate inflation and may produce defects.
Findings
Higgs fluctuations are enhanced when H > Λ_I
Inflation persists despite Higgs vacuum instability
Up to 1% of spacetime may form defects during inflation
Abstract
We study the inflationary evolution of a scalar field with an unstable potential for the case where the Hubble parameter during inflation is larger than the instability scale of the potential. Quantum fluctuations in the field of size imply that the unstable part of the potential is sampled during inflation. We investigate the evolution of these fluctuations to the unstable regime, and in particular whether they generate cosmological defects or even terminate inflation. We apply the results of a toy scalar model to the case of the Standard Model (SM) Higgs boson, whose quartic evolves to negative values at high scales, and extend previous analyses of Higgs dynamics during inflation utilizing statistical methods to a perturbative and fully gauge-invariant formulation. We show that the dynamics are controlled by the renormalization…
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