Weyl gauge symmetry and its spontaneous breaking in Standard Model and inflation
D. M. Ghilencea, Hyun Min Lee

TL;DR
This paper explores how Weyl gauge symmetry and its spontaneous breaking can be integrated into models beyond the Standard Model and inflation, addressing issues like the hierarchy problem and enabling successful inflation with scalar fields.
Contribution
It introduces a model where Weyl gauge symmetry avoids negative kinetic terms and naturally incorporates inflation and hierarchy problem solutions.
Findings
Weyl gauge field becomes massive via Stueckelberg mechanism.
Dilaton can act as UV regulator maintaining quantum Weyl symmetry.
Inflation can be successfully realized with scalar fields in this framework.
Abstract
We discuss the local (gauged) Weyl symmetry and its spontaneous breaking and apply it to model building beyond the Standard Model (SM) and inflation. In models with non-minimal couplings of the scalar fields to the Ricci scalar, that are conformal invariant, the spontaneous generation by a scalar field(s) vev of a positive Newton constant demands a negative kinetic term for the scalar field, or vice-versa. This is naturally avoided in models with additional Weyl gauge symmetry. The Weyl gauge field couples to the scalar sector but not to the fermionic sector of a SM-like Lagrangian. The field undergoes a Stueckelberg mechanism and becomes massive after "eating" the (radial mode) would-be-Goldstone field (dilaton ) in the scalar sector. Before the decoupling of , the dilaton can act as UV regulator and maintain the Weyl symmetry at the {\it…
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