I Metastability of the Higgs field

ryan liberty
Messages
5
Reaction score
1
One current theory surrounding the higgs field is that it might be metastable, as in it acts stable but could (through quantum tunneling) drop it's energy level to become truly stable. This drop in energy would release all of the potential energy contained in the field. This is of course vacuum decay, which would destroy the universe as we know it. How do we predict this? We probably can't, however help would be appreciated.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
ryan liberty said:
How do we predict this?
What do you mean with this? Do you mean when it will happen or do you mean how we predict than it can occur. The answers are widely different.
 
Orodruin said:
What do you mean with this? Do you mean when it will happen or do you mean how we predict than it can occur. The answers are widely different.
I mean how do we know that it CAN happen, I haven't found data on it.
 
ryan liberty said:
I mean how do we know that it CAN happen, I haven't found data on it.
This is not knowable. It is an extrapolation of the current Standard Model - which is also known to be incomplete.
 
This is an alert about a claim regarding the standard model, that got a burst of attention in the past two weeks. The original paper came out last year: "The electroweak η_W meson" by Gia Dvali, Archil Kobakhidze, Otari Sakhelashvili (2024) The recent follow-up and other responses are "η_W-meson from topological properties of the electroweak vacuum" by Dvali et al "Hiding in Plain Sight, the electroweak η_W" by Giacomo Cacciapaglia, Francesco Sannino, Jessica Turner "Astrophysical...

Similar threads

Back
Top