The initial data on the production and decay of the Higgs boson reported
significant deviations from the Standard Model (SM) expectations, prompting
much speculation about its couplings to the other particles. Although the
latest data has veered towards conformity with the SM, there is yet room for a
sizable deviation from the SM values of the coupling of the Higgs boson with
ttˉ, and to a smaller extent, of that with W+W− and ZZ. Keeping
the fluid nature of the data in mind, this opens up an interesting avenue to
explore regarding unitarity of gauge boson scattering and the stability of the
electroweak vacuum in the presence of anomalous couplings. We show that, for
some typical benchmark points, unitarity in gauge boson scattering breaks down
between 1 and 10 TeV. We also show that if there are no new light degrees of
freedom, the Higgs quartic coupling becomes negative at around the same point,
making the electroweak vacuum unstable. Thus, some new ultraviolet completing
new physics is demanded at that scale to cancel both these anomalous behaviours
if such deviations from the SM couplings are indeed established.Comment: 15 pages, 6 figures. Discussion on recent results of ATLAS and CMS.
Conclusions unchanged. Author list modified. Version accepted in Physical
Review