11,345 research outputs found
The Top Quark: Experimental Roots and Branches of Theory
The CDF and D0 experiments at the Fermilab Tevatron have discovered the top
quark and provided first measurements of many of its properties. The small top
sample gathered by Run I leaves open many possibilities for top physics beyond
the standard model. Run II and the LHC (and eventually an LC) promise to deepen
our knowledge of the top quark and its relationship to electroweak symmetry
breaking.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figures; talk presented at HCP200
Top Theories
As the most recently discovered and heaviest quark, the top presents us with
theoretical challenges. How are we to understand its properties within the
larger effort to explain the origins of electroweak and flavor symmetry
breaking ? This talk discusses some of the surprises the top quark may have in
store for us and indicates how experiment may help us pinpoint the truth about
top.Comment: 17 pages, 15 figures, Talk presented at Heavy Flavours 8, University
of Southampton, England, July 25-29, 199
Anomalous Gluon Self-Interactions and Production
Strong-interaction physics that lies beyond the standard model may
conveniently be described by an effective Lagrangian. The only genuinely
gluonic CP-conserving term at dimension six is the three-gluon-field-strength
operator . This operator, which alters the 3-gluon and 4-gluon vertices
form their standard model forms, turns out to be difficult to detect in final
states containing light jets. Its effects on top quark pair production hold the
greatest promise of visibility.Comment: Latex file using [aps,aipbook,floats,epsf]{revtex}. 12 pages, 4
Postscript figures. Full PS copy at http://smyrd.bu.edu/htfigs/htfigs.html
Talk presented by EHS at the International Symposium on Vector Boson
Self-Interactions, UCLA, Feb. 1-3, 199
Electroweak Limits on Non-Universal Z' Bosons
Many types of physics beyond the standard model include an extended
electroweak gauge group. If these extensions are associated with flavor
symmetry breaking, the gauge interactions will not be flavor-universal. In this
note we update the bounds placed by electroweak data on the existence of flavor
non-universal extensions to the standard model in the context of topcolor
assisted technicolor (TC2), noncommuting extended technicolor (NCETC), and the
ununified standard model (UUM). In the first two cases the extended gauge
interactions couple to the third generation fermions differently than to the
light fermions, while in the ununified standard model the gauge interactions
couple differently to quarks and leptons. The extra SU(2) triplet of gauge
bosons in NCETC and UUM models must be heavier than about 3 TeV, while the
extra Z boson in TC2 models must be heavier than about 1 TeV.Comment: 17 pages, 5 figures; added references; updated figure
Testing Extended Technicolor With
We review the connection between and the vertex in ETC
models and demonstrate the power of the resulting experimental constraint on
models with weak-singlet ETC bosons. Some efforts to bring ETC models into
agreement with experimental data on the vertex are mentioned, and
the most promising one (non-commuting ETC) is discussed in detail.Comment: Talk given by E.H. Simmons at the Yukawa International Seminar `95 in
Kyoto, 21-26 August, 1995 and at the International Symposium on Heavy Flavor
and Electroweak Theory in Beijing, 17-19 August, 1995. Latex (uses PTPTeX.sty
and epsf). 9 pages. 1 figure. Full postscript version available at
http://smyrd.bu.edu/ . (minor typos corrected
Custodial Symmetry, Flavor Physics, and the Triviality Bound on the Higgs Mass
The triviality of the scalar sector of the standard one-doublet Higgs model
implies that this model is only an effective low-energy theory valid below some
cut-off scale Lambda. We show that the experimental constraint on the amount of
custodial symmetry violation implies that the scale Lambda must be greater than
of order 7.5 TeV. The underlying high-energy theory must also include flavor
dynamics at a scale of order Lambda or greater in order to give rise to the
different Yukawa couplings of the Higgs to ordinary fermions. This flavor
dynamics will generically produce flavor-changing neutral currents. We show
that the experimental constraints on the neutral D-meson mass difference imply
that Lambda must be greater than of order 21 TeV. For theories defined about
the infrared-stable Gaussian fixed-point, we estimate that this lower bound on
Lambda yields an upper bound of approximately 460 GeV on the Higgs boson's
mass, independent of the regulator chosen to define the theory. We also show
that some regulator schemes, such as higher-derivative regulators, used to
define the theory about a different fixed-point are particularly dangerous
because an infinite number of custodial-isospin-violating operators become
relevant.Comment: 15 pages, 7 ps/eps embedded figures, talk presented at the 1996
International Workshop on Perspectives of Strong Coupling Gauge Theories
(SCGT 96), Nagoya, Japa
Colorons: Theory and Phenomenology
We briefly describe the structure and phenomenology of a flavor-universal extension of the strong interactions, focusing on the color-octet of massive gauge bosons (`colorons') present in the low-energy spectrum. We discuss current limits on the colorons and what future measurements may reveal
Testing Extended Technicolor with R_b and Single Top Quark Production
We review the connection between m_t and the vertex in ETC models
and discuss how data on R_b constrains ETC models. Theories in which the ETC
and weak gauge groups do not commute are consistent with electroweak data and
predict effects on single top production that will be visible at Fermilab.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures; Talk given at Ringberg Workshop on The Higgs
Puzzle, 8-13 December 199
Higgsless Models: Lessons from Deconstruction
This talk reviews recent progress in Higgsless models of electroweak symmetry
breaking, and summarizes relevant points of model-building and phenomenology.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figures, Presented at the X Mexican Workshop on Particles
and Field
The Top Triangle Moose
We introduce a deconstructed model that incorporates both Higgsless and
top-color mechanisms. The model alleviates the typical tension in Higgsless
models between obtaining the correct top quark mass and keeping delta-rho
small. It does so by singling out the top quark mass generation as arising from
a Yukawa coupling to an effective top-Higgs which develops a small vacuum
expectation value, while electroweak symmetry breaking results largely from a
Higgsless mechanism. As a result, the heavy partners of the SM fermions can be
light enough to be seen at the LHC.Comment: To appear in proceedings of SCGT09, Nagoya, Japan. 5 page
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