Gravity, as a classical regulator for the Higgs field, and the origin of rest masses and electric charge
L\'aszl\'o B Szabados

TL;DR
This paper explores how gravity influences the Higgs field in the classical Einstein-Standard Model system, revealing conditions under which the Higgs field's rest mass and electric charge are dynamically generated or vanish near singularities.
Contribution
It demonstrates that the Higgs field's behavior near singularities and in symmetric spacetimes affects the emergence of rest masses and charges, providing new insights into the role of gravity as a regulator.
Findings
The energy-momentum tensor can have two types of singularities: Big Bang and a less violent 'Small Bang'.
In certain cosmological conditions, the Higgs field's norm is bounded by gravitational effects.
Instantaneous vacuum states do not exist in some symmetric spacetimes, affecting mass generation.
Abstract
The classical Einstein--Standard Model system with conformally invariant coupling of the Higgs field to gravity is investigated. We show that the energy-momentum tensor is not polynomial in the Higgs field, and hence it may have two singularities: In cosmological spacetimes the usual Big Bang type singularity with diverging matter field variables, and a second, less violent one (Small Bang), in which it is only the geometry that is singular but the matter field variables remain finite. In generic spacetimes, the latter provides a finite, universal upper bound for the pointwise norm of the Higgs field in terms of Newton's gravitational constant. We also show that, in the presence of Friedman--Robertson--Walker or Kantowski--Sachs symmetries, the energy density can have finite local minimum only if the transitivity hypersurfaces of the spacetime symmetries are locally hyperboloidal and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCosmology and Gravitation Theories · Black Holes and Theoretical Physics · Noncommutative and Quantum Gravity Theories
