519 research outputs found
What's new with the electroweak phase transition?
We review the status of non-perturbative lattice studies of the electroweak
phase transition. In the Standard Model, the complete phase diagram has been
reliably determined, and the conclusion is that there is no phase transition at
all for the experimentally allowed Higgs masses. In the Minimal Supersymmetric
Standard Model (MSSM), in contrast, there can be a strong first order
transition allowing for baryogenesis. Finally, we point out possibilities for
future simulations, such as the problem of CP-violation at the MSSM electroweak
phase boundary.Comment: LATTICE98(electroweak), 6 pages. List of references update
A Strong Electroweak Phase Transition up to m_H ~ 105 GeV
Non-perturbative lattice simulations have shown that there is no electroweak
phase transition in the Standard Model for the allowed Higgs masses, m_H \gsim
75 GeV. In the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model, in contrast, it has been
proposed that the transition should exist and even be strong enough for
baryogenesis up to m_H ~ 105 GeV, provided that the lightest stop mass is in
the range 100...160 GeV. However, this prediction is based on perturbation
theory, and suffers from a noticeable gauge parameter and renormalization scale
dependence. We have performed large-scale lattice Monte Carlo simulations of
the MSSM electroweak phase transition. Extrapolating the results to the
infinite volume and continuum limits, we find that the transition is in fact
stronger than indicated by 2-loop perturbation theory. This guarantees that the
perturbative Higgs mass bound m_H ~ 105 GeV is a conservative one, allows
slightly larger stop masses (up to ~ 165 GeV), and provides a strong motivation
for further studies of MSSM electroweak baryogenesis.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
First order thermal phase transition with 126 GeV Higgs mass
We study the strength of the electroweak phase transition in models with two
light Higgs doublets and a light SU(3)_c triplet by means of lattice
simulations in a dimensionally reduced effective theory. In the parameter
region considered the transition on the lattice is significantly stronger than
indicated by a 2-loop perturbative analysis. Within some ultraviolet
uncertainties, the finding applies to MSSM with a Higgs mass m_h approximately
126 GeV and shows that the parameter region useful for electroweak baryogenesis
is enlarged. In particular (even though only dedicated analyses can quantify
the issue), the tension between LHC constraints after the 7 TeV and 8 TeV runs
and frameworks where the electroweak phase transition is driven by light stops,
seems to be relaxed.Comment: Presented at 31st International Symposium on Lattice Field Theory -
LATTICE 201
3D Physics and the Electroweak Phase Transition: Perturbation Theory
We develop a method for the construction of the effective potential at high
temperatures based on the effective field theory approach and renormalization
group. It allows one to sum up the leading logarithms in all orders of
perturbation theory. The method reproduces the known one-loop and two-loop
results in a very simple and economic way and clarifies the issue of the
convergence of the perturbation theory. We also discuss the assumptions being
made for the determination of the critical temperature of the electroweak phase
transition, and analyse different perturbative uncertainties in its
determination. These results are then used for the non-perturbative lattice
Monte Carlo simulations of the EW phase transition in forthcoming paper.Comment: 44 pages, preprint CERN-TH.6973/9
The Phase Diagram of Three-Dimensional SU(3) + Adjoint Higgs Theory
We study the phase diagram of the three-dimensional SU(3)+adjoint Higgs
theory with lattice Monte Carlo simulations. A critical line consisting of a
first order line, a tricritical point and a second order line, divides the
phase diagram into two parts distinguished by =0 and /=0. The location
and the type of the critical line are determined by measuring the condensates
and , and the masses of scalar and vector excitations.
Although in principle there can be different types of broken phases,
corresponding perturbatively to unbroken SU(2)xU(1) or U(1)xU(1) symmetries, we
find that dynamically only the broken phase with SU(2)xU(1)-like properties is
realized. The relation of the phase diagram to 4d finite temperature QCD is
discussed.Comment: 21 pages, 8 figure
O(2) symmetry breaking vs. vortex loop percolation
We study with lattice Monte Carlo simulations the relation of global O(2)
symmetry breaking in three dimensions to the properties of a geometrically
defined vortex loop network. We find that different definitions of constructing
a network lead to different results even in the thermodynamic limit, and that
with typical definitions the percolation transition does not coincide with the
thermodynamic phase transition. These results show that geometrically defined
percolation observables need not display universal properties related to the
critical behaviour of the system, and do not in general survive in the field
theory limit.Comment: 14 pages; references added, version to appear in Phys.Lett.
Non-perturbative plaquette in 3d pure SU(3)
We present a determination of the elementary plaquette and, after the
subsequent ultraviolet subtractions, of the finite part of the gluon
condensate, in lattice regularization in three-dimensional pure SU(3) gauge
theory. Through a change of regularization scheme to MSbar and a matching back
to full four-dimensional QCD, this result determines the first non-perturbative
contribution in the weak-coupling expansion of hot QCD pressure.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, talk presented at Lattice 2005 (Non-zero
temperature and density
High-T QCD and dimensional reduction: measuring the Debye mass
We study the high-temperature phase of SU(2) and SU(3) QCD using lattice
simulations of an effective 3-dimensional SU(N) + adjoint Higgs -theory,
obtained through dimensional reduction. We investigate the phase diagram of the
3D theory, and find that the high-T QCD phase corresponds to the metastable
symmetric phase of the 3D theory. We measure the Debye screening mass m_D with
gauge invariant operators; in particular we determine the O(g^2) and O(g^3)
corrections to m_D. The corrections are seen to be large, modifying the
standard power-counting hierarchy in high temperature QCD.Comment: 3 pages, Latex, 3 figures. Presented by K. Rummukainen at Lattice '9
Three-dimensional physics and the pressure of hot QCD
We update Monte Carlo simulations of the three-dimensional SU(3) + adjoint
Higgs theory, by extrapolating carefully to the infinite volume and continuum
limits, in order to estimate the contribution of the infrared modes to the
pressure of hot QCD. The sum of infrared contributions beyond the known 4-loop
order turns out to be a smooth function, of a reasonable magnitude and specific
sign. Unfortunately, adding this function to the known 4-loop terms does not
improve the match to four-dimensional lattice data, in spite of the fact that
other quantities, such as correlation lengths, spatial string tension, or quark
number susceptibilities, work well within the same setup. We outline possible
ways to reduce the mismatch.Comment: 14 page
The Electroweak Phase Transition in a Magnetic Field
We study the finite temperature electroweak phase transition in an external
hypercharge U(1) magnetic field H_Y, using lattice Monte Carlo simulations. For
sufficiently small fields, H_Y/T^2 < 0.3, the magnetic field makes the first
order transition stronger, but it still turns into a crossover for Higgs masses
m_H ~ 80 GeV. For larger fields, we observe a mixed phase analogous to a type I
superconductor, where a single macroscopic tube of the symmetric phase,
parallel to H_Y, penetrates through the broken phase. For the magnetic fields
and Higgs masses studied, we did not see indications of the expected
Ambjorn-Olesen phase, which should be similar to a type II superconductor.Comment: 20 pages, 7 figures. Discussion on lattice results extended. To
appear in Nucl.Phys.
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