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Top quark condensate

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In particle physics, the top quark condensate theory (or top condensation) is an alternative to the Standard Model fundamental Higgs field, where the Higgs boson is a composite field, composed of the top quark and its antiquark. The top quark-antiquark pairs are bound together by a new force called topcolor, analogous to the binding of Cooper pairs in a BCS superconductor, or mesons in the strong interactions. The idea of binding of top quarks is motivated because it is comparatively heavy, with a measured mass is approximately 173 GeV (comparable to the electroweak scale), and so its Yukawa coupling is of order unity, suggesting the possibility of strong coupling dynamics at high energy scales. This model attempts to explain how the electroweak scale may match the top quark mass.

History

The idea was described by Yoichiro Nambu and subsequently developed by Miransky, Tanabashi, and Yamawaki [1][2] and Bardeen, Hill, and Lindner,[3] who connected the theory to the renormalization group and improved its predictions.

The renormalization group reveals that top quark condensation is fundamentally based upon the "infrared fixed point" for the top quark Higgs-Yukawa coupling, proposed in 1981 by Pendleton and Ross.[4] and Hill,[5] The infrared fixed point originally predicted that the top quark would be heavy, contrary to the prevailing view of the early 1980s. Indeed, the top quark was discovered in 1995 at the large mass of 175 GeV. The infrared-fixed point implies that it is strongly coupled to the Higgs boson at very high energies, corresponding to the Landau pole of the Higgs-Yukawa coupling. At this high scale the boundstate Higgs forms, and the coupling relaxes in the infrared to its measured value of order unity by the renormalization group. The Standard Model renormalization group fixed point prediction is about 220 GeV, and roughly 25% higher than the observed top mass.

The simplest top condensation models also predicted that the Higgs boson mass would be about 250 GeV, and have now been ruled out by the LHC discovery of the Higgs boson at a mass scale of 125 GeV. However, extended versions of the theory, introducing more particles, can be made consistent with the observed top quark mass.

Future

The composite Higgs boson arises naturally in Topcolor models, that are extensions of the standard model in analogy to quantum chromodynamics. To be natural, without excessive fine-tuning (i.e. to stabilize the Higgs mass from large radiative corrections), the theory requires new physics at a relatively low energy scale. Placing new physics at 10 TeV, for instance, the model predicts the top quark to be significantly heavier than observed (at about 600 GeV vs. 171 GeV). "Top Seesaw" models, also based upon Topcolor, circumvent this difficulty.

The predicted top quark mass comes into improved agreement with the fixed point if there are many additional Higgs scalars beyond the standard model. This may be indicating a rich spectroscopy of new composite Higgs fields at energy scales that can be probed with the LHC and its upgrades.[6][7]

The general idea of a composite Higgs boson, connected in a fundamental way to the top quark, remains compelling, though the full details are not yet understood.

See also


References

  1. ^ Miransky, Vladimir A.; Tanabashi, Masaharu; Yamawaki, Koichi (1989). "Dynamical electroweak symmetry breaking with large anomalous dimension and t quark condensate". Phys. Lett. B. 221 (177).
  2. ^ Miransky, Vladimir A.; Tanabashi, Masaharu; Yamawaki, Koichi. "Is the t quark responsible for the mass of W and Z bosons?".
  3. ^ Bardeen, William A.; Hill, Christopher T.; Lindner, Manfred (1990). "Minimal dynamical symmetry breaking of the standard model". Physical Review D. 41 (5): 1647–1660. Bibcode:1990PhRvD..41.1647B. doi:10.1103/PhysRevD.41.1647. {{cite journal}}: Unknown parameter |last-author-amp= ignored (|name-list-style= suggested) (help)
  4. ^ Pendleton, B.; Ross, G.G. (1981). "Mass and Mixing Angle Predictions from Infrared Fixed points". Phys. Lett. B. 98: 291.
  5. ^ Hill, C.T. (1981). "Quark and Lepton masses from Renormalization group fixed points". Physical Review D. 24: 691. Bibcode:1981PhRvD..24..691H. doi:10.1103/PhysRevD.24.691.
  6. ^ Hill, Christopher T.; Machado, Pedro; Thomsen, Anders; Turner, Jessica (2019). "Where are the Next Higgs Bosons?". Physical Review. D100 (1): 015051. arXiv:1904.04257. doi:10.1103/PhysRevD.100.015051.
  7. ^ Hill, Christopher T.; Machado, Pedro; Thomsen, Anders; Turner, Jessica (2019). "Scalar Democracy". Physical Review. D100 (1): 015015. arXiv:1902.07214. doi:10.1103/PhysRevD.100.015015.