Abstract

The global picture of the Higgs potential in the bottom-up approach is still unknown. A large deviation as big as O(1) fluctuations of the Higgs self couplings is still a viable option for the New Physics. An interesting New Physics scenario which can be linked to a large Higgs self coupling is the baryogenesis based on the strong first order phase transition. We revisit the strong first order phase transition in two classes of Beyond the Standard Models, namely the Higgs portal with the singlet scalar under the Standard Model gauge group with Z2 symmetry and the effective field theory approach with higher-dimensional operators. We numerically investigate a few important issues in the validity of the effective potential, caused by the breakdown of the high-temperature approximation, and in the criteria for the strong first order phase transition. We illustrate that these issues can lead to O(1) uncertainties in the precision of the Higgs self couplings, which are relevant when discussing sensitivity limits of different future colliders. We also find that the quartic coupling of the above two classes of scenarios compatible with the strong first order electroweak phase transition where the cubic coupling is not negligible, can achieve a $2\sigma$ sensitivity at the 100 TeV pp-collider. From this novel observation, we show that the correlation between the Higgs cubic coupling and the quartic coupling will be useful for differentiating various underlying New Physics scenarios and discuss its prospect for the future colliders. Throughout our numerical investigation, the contribution from Goldstone boson is not included.

Highlights

  • The baryon asymmetry of the universe remains a challenging mystery

  • 13The nondecoupling behavior we found is not the same nondecoupling issue addressed in the literature: since the high-temperature approximation enters into the effective potential either indirectly via the truncated thermal mass or directly via the approximated thermal potential itself, it reveals a different form of nondecouplings

  • We have explored the correlation between the Higgs cubic and the quartic couplings in the scenarios where electroweak phase transition is strongly first order

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

An explanation of the baryon asymmetry based on the strong first order electroweak phase transition (SFOEPT) of the Higgs potential is a commonly explored option. The baryon asymmetry would have been washed out if the sphaleron process inside the bubbles is not sufficiently suppressed This requires that the phase transition needs to be strongly first order for the successful EWBG based on the SFOEPT. If the deviation of the cubic coupling with respect to the SM one is not negligible, the measurement of Higgs quartic coupling is palpable in the future colliders [37,40,41] This can serve as a discriminator among different underlying models responsible for the electroweak phase transition.

EFFECTIVE POTENTIAL IN FINITE TEMPERATURE
BENCHMARK SCENARIOS
Higgs portal with a singlet scalar
Effective field theory approach
On the criteria of strong first order phase transition
Prospect for future collider
VALIDITY OF EFFECTIVE POTENTIAL
Findings
CONCLUSION
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