Living Without Supersymmetry -- the Conformal Alternative and a Dynamical Higgs Boson
Philip D. Mannheim

TL;DR
This paper proposes a conformal symmetry-based alternative to supersymmetry, suggesting the Higgs boson is a dynamical bound state, which addresses the hierarchy problem and explains cosmological observations without supersymmetry or dark matter.
Contribution
It introduces a conformal invariant theory with dynamical symmetry breaking, reinterprets it as a renormalizable NJL model, and couples it to conformal gravity to resolve key issues in fundamental physics.
Findings
Higgs boson emerges as a narrow resonance above threshold.
Conformal gravity addresses vacuum energy and cosmological problems.
The theory eliminates the need for supersymmetry and dark matter.
Abstract
We show that key results of supersymmetry can be achieved via conformal symmetry. We propose that the Higgs boson be a dynamical bound state rather than an elementary scalar, so that there is no quadratic divergence self-energy problem for it and no need to invoke supersymmetry to resolve it. We study a conformal invariant theory of interacting fermions and gauge bosons, in which there is scaling with anomalous dimensions and dynamical symmetry breaking, with the dynamical dimension of being reduced from 3 to 2. With this reduction we augment the theory with a then renormalizable 4-fermion interaction with dynamical dimension equal to 4. We reinterpret the theory as a renormalizable version of the Nambu-Jona-Lasinio (NJL) model, with the gauge theory sector with its now massive fermion being the mean field and the 4-fermion interaction being the residual interaction. It…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
