|
VOLUME 97 (2013) | ISSUE 6 |
PAGE 344
|
Nambu sum rule in the NJL models: from superfluidity to top quark condensation
G. E. Volovik, M. A. Zubkov +
Lounasmaa Laboratory, Aalto University, School of Science and Technology, P.O. Box 15100, FI-00076 AALTO, Finland Landau Institute for Theoretical Physics of the RAS, 119334 Moscow, Russia +Institute for Theoretical and Experimental Physics, 117259 Moscow, Russia
Abstract
It may appear that the recently found resonance at 125 GeV is not the only
Higgs boson.
We point out the possibility that the Higgs bosons appear in models of
top-quark condensation, where the masses of the bosonic excitations are
related to the top quark mass by the sum rule similar to the Nambu sum rule
of the NJL models [1]. This rule was originally considered by Nambu
for superfluid 3He-B and for the BCS model of superconductivity. It
relates the two masses of bosonic excitations existing in each channel of
Cooper pairing to the fermion mass. An example of the Nambu partners is
provided by the amplitude and the phase modes in the BCS model describing
Cooper pairing in the s-wave channel. This sum rule suggests the existence
of the Nambu partners for the 125 GeV Higgs boson. Their masses can be
predicted by the Nambu sum rule
under certain circumstances. For example, if there are only two states in
the given channel, the mass of the Nambu partner is 325 GeV. They
together satisfy the Nambu sum rule
M12 +M22 = 4 Mt2, where GeV is the mass of the top quark. If
there are two doubly degenerated states, then the second mass is
GeV. In this case the Nambu sum rule is
2 M12 + 2 M22 = 4 Mt2.
In addition, the properties of the Higgs modes in superfluid 3He-A, where
the symmetry breaking is similar to that of the Standard Model of particle
physics, suggest the existence of two electrically charged Higgs particles
with masses around 245 GeV, which together also obey the Nambu sum rule
M+2 + M-2 = 4 Mt2.
|
|