arivero said:
It has be mentioned the real singlet extension of the Standard Model by Chamseddine and Connes. But I favour a pair of charged scalars, so, question: what is the status of the Complex Singlet Extensions of the Standard Model, or their susy versions? Are they still there?
At one point in the paper I was just reading, Cham-Connes said
real OR complex singlet. It sounded like they were not limiting themselves (at least at that point in the discussion) to real. However I can't answer your question.
I posted the abstract of the new Chamseddine Connes paper here:
https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?p=4024721#post4024721
together with some related links, in case anyone wants to discuss them.
The August 2012 one could turn out to be quite an interesting paper so I'll post the abstract to make it more clear what is being discussed:
http://arxiv.org/abs/1208.1030
Resilience of the Spectral Standard Model
Ali H. Chamseddine, Alain Connes
(Submitted on 5 Aug 2012)
We show that the inconsistency between the spectral Standard Model and the experimental value of the Higgs mass is resolved by the presence of a real scalar field strongly coupled to the Higgs field. This scalar field was already present in the spectral model and we wrongly neglected it in our previous computations. It was shown recently by several authors, independently of the spectral approach, that such a strongly coupled scalar field stabilizes the Standard Model up to unification scale in spite of the low value of the Higgs mass. In this letter we show that the noncommutative neutral singlet modifies substantially the RG analysis, invalidates our previous prediction of Higgs mass in the range 160--180 Gev, and restores the consistency of the noncommutative geometric model with the low Higgs mass.
13 pages
This consists largely of a re-examination of their April 2010 paper (which is reference [2] and cited repeatedly). The 2010 paper treats the Spectral Standard Model and a sketch of the unification of forces roughly along "Big Desert" lines...