We consider the effective potential V in the standard model with a single
Higgs doublet in the limit that the only mass scale ΞΌ present is
radiatively generated. Using a technique that has been shown to determine V
completely in terms of the renormalization group (RG) functions when using the
Coleman-Weinberg (CW) renormalization scheme, we first sum leading-log (LL)
contributions to V using the one loop RG functions, associated with five
couplings (the top quark Yukawa coupling x, the quartic coupling of the Higgs
field y, the SU(3) gauge coupling z, and the SU(2)ΓU(1) couplings
r and s). We then employ the two loop RG functions with the three couplings
x, y, z to sum the next-to-leading-log (NLL) contributions to V and
then the three to five loop RG functions with one coupling y to sum all the
N2LL...N4LL contributions to V. In order to compute these sums, it is
necessary to convert those RG functions that have been originally computed
explicitly in the minimal subtraction (MS) scheme to their form in the CW
scheme. The Higgs mass can then be determined from the effective potential: the
LL result is mHβ=219GeV/c2 decreases to mHβ=188GeV/c2 at
N2LL order and mHβ=163GeV/c2 at N4LL order. No reasonable
estimate of mHβ can be made at orders VNLLβ or VN3LLβ. This is taken
to be an indication that this mechanism for spontaneous symmetry breaking is in
fact viable, though one in which there is slow convergence towards the actual
value of mHβ. The mass 163GeV/c2 is argued to be an upper bound on
mHβ.Comment: 24 pages, 5 figures. Updated version contains new discussion,
references, figures, and corrects errors in reference