58 research outputs found
Precision calculations for h->WW/ZZ->4 fermions in the Two-Higgs-Doublet Model with PROPHECY4F
We have calculated the next-to-leading-order electroweak and QCD corrections
to the decay processes h -> WW/ZZ -> 4 fermions of the light CP-even Higgs
boson h of various types of Two-Higgs-Doublet Models (Types I and II,
"lepton-specific" and "flipped" models). The input parameters are defined in
four different renormalization schemes, where parameters that are not directly
accessible by experiments are defined in the MSbar scheme. Numerical results
are presented for the corrections to partial decay widths for various benchmark
scenarios previously motivated in the literature, where we investigate the
dependence on the MSbar renormalization scale and on the choice of the
renormalization scheme in detail. We find that it is crucial to be precise with
these issues in parameter analyses, since parameter conversions between
different schemes can involve sizeable or large corrections, especially in
scenarios that are close to experimental exclusion limits or theoretical
bounds. It even turns out that some renormalization schemes are not applicable
in specific regions of parameter space. Our investigation of differential
distributions shows that corrections beyond the Standard Model are mostly
constant offsets induced by the mixing between the light and heavy CP-even
Higgs bosons, so that differential analyses of h -> 4f decay observables do not
help to identify Two-Higgs-Doublet Models. Moreover, the decay widths do not
significantly depend on the specific type of those models. The calculations are
implemented in the public Monte Carlo generator PROPHECY4F and ready for
application.Comment: 56 pages, 39 figure
Renormalization schemes for the Two-Higgs-Doublet Model and applications to h -> WW/ZZ -> 4fermions
We perform the renormalization of different types of Two-Higgs-Doublet Models
for the calculation of observables at next-to-leading order. In detail, we
suggest four different renormalization schemes based on on-shell
renormalization conditions as far as possible and on MSbar prescriptions for
the remaining field-mixing parameters where no distinguished on-shell condition
exists and make contact to existing schemes in the literature. In particular,
we treat the tadpole diagrams in different ways and discuss issues of gauge
independence and perturbative stability in the considered schemes. The
renormalization group equations for the MSbar parameters are solved in each
scheme, so that a consistent renormalization scale variation can be performed.
We have implemented all Feynman rules including counterterms and the
renormalization conditions into a FeynArts model file, so that amplitudes and
squared matrix elements can be generated automatically. As an application we
compute the decay of the light, CP-even Higgs boson of the Two-Higgs-Doublet
Model into four fermions at next-to-leading order. The comparison of different
schemes and the investigation of the renormalization scale dependence allows us
to test the perturbative consistency in each of the renormalization schemes,
and to get a better estimate of the theoretical uncertainty that arises due to
the truncation of the perturbation series.Comment: 44 pages, 8 figures, revised version, to appear in JHE
Supersymmetric Higgs Production in Vector-Boson Fusion
We present a full calculation of the supersymmetric NLO corrections to Higgs
boson production via vector-boson fusion. The supersymmetric QCD corrections
turn out to be significantly smaller than the electroweak ones. These
higher-order corrections are an important ingredient to a precision analysis of
the Higgs sector at the LHC.Comment: 6 pages; talk given at RADCOR 2009 - 9th International Symposium on
Radiative Corrections (Applications of Quantum Field Theory to
Phenomenology), October 25 - 30 2009, Ascona, Switzerland, v2: reference
adde
How well do we need to measure Higgs boson couplings?
Most of the discussion regarding the Higgs boson couplings to Standard Model
vector bosons and fermions is presented with respect to what present and future
collider detectors will be able to measure. Here, we ask the more physics-based
question of how well do we need to measure the Higgs boson couplings? We first
present a reasonable definition of "need" and then investigate the answer in
the context of various highly motivated new physics scenarios: supersymmetry,
mixed-in hidden sector Higgs bosons, and a composite Higgs boson. We find the
largest coupling deviations away from the SM Higgs couplings that are possible
if no other state related to EWSB is directly accessible at the LHC. Depending
on the physics scenario under consideration, we find targets that range from
less than 1% to 10% for vector bosons, and from a few percent to tens of
percent for couplings to fermions.Comment: 9 pages, 10 figures; v3: minor corrections, to be published in
Physical Review
How well do we need to measure the Higgs boson mass and self-coupling?
Much of the discussion regarding future measurements of the Higgs boson mass
and self-coupling is focussed on how well various collider options can do. In
this article we ask a physics-based question of how well do we need colliders
to measure these quantities to have an impact on discovery of new physics or an
impact in how we understand the role of the Higgs boson in nature. We address
the question within the framework of the Standard Model and various beyond the
Standard Model scenarios, including supersymmetry and theories of composite
Higgs bosons. We conclude that the LHC's stated ability to measure the Higgs
boson to better than 150 MeV will be as good as we will ever need to know the
Higgs boson mass in the foreseeable future. On the other hand, we estimate that
the self-coupling will likely need to be measured to better than 20 percent to
see a deviation from the Standard Model expectation. This is a challenging
target for future collider and upgrade scenarios.Comment: 20 pages, 4 figure
Electroweak renormalization based on gauge-invariant vacuum expectation values of non-linear Higgs representations: 2. extended Higgs sectors
A recently proposed scheme for a gauge-invariant treatment of tadpole
corrections in spontaneously broken gauge theories - called Gauge-Invariant
Vacuum expectation value Scheme (GIVS) - is applied to a singlet Higgs
extension of the Standard Model and to the Two-Higgs Doublet Model. In contrast
to previously used tadpole schemes, the GIVS unifies the gauge-invariance
property with perturbative stability. For the Standard Model this was
demonstrated for the conversion between on-shell and MSbar renormalized masses,
where the GIVS leads to very moderate, gauge-independent electroweak
corrections. In models with extended scalar sectors, issues with tadpole
renormalization exist if Higgs mixing angles are renormalized with MSbar
conditions, which is the major subject of this article. In detail, we first
formulate non-linear representations of the extended scalar sectors, which is
an interesting subject in its own right. Then we formulate the GIVS which
employs these non-linear representations in the calculation of the tadpole
renormalization constants, while actual higher-order calculations in the GIVS
proceed in linear representations as usual. Finally, for the considered models
we discuss the next-to-leading-order (electroweak and QCD) corrections to the
decay processes fermions of the CP-even neutral Higgs
bosons h and H using MSbar-renormalized Higgs mixing angles with the GIVS and
previously used tadpole treatments.Comment: 40 pages, latex, typos in Eqs.(3.33) and (3.59) corrected, all
results unchange
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