Abstract We propose a framework in which Weinberg’s anthropic explanation of the cosmological constant problem also solves the hierarchy problem. The weak scale is selected by chiral dynamics that controls the stabilization of an extra dimension. When the Higgs vacuum expectation value is close to a fermion mass scale, the radius of an extra dimension becomes large, and develops an enhanced number of vacua available to scan the cosmological constant down to its observed value. At low energies, the radion necessarily appears as an unnaturally light scalar, in a range of masses and couplings accessible to fifth-force searches as well as scalar dark matter searches with atomic clocks and gravitational-wave detectors. The fermion sector that co...
AbstractIn the presence of large extra dimensions, the fundamental Planck scale can be much lower th...
We solve the cosmological constant puzzle by attributing its origin to gravitational self-energy of ...
The cosmological constant and the Higgs mass seem unnaturally small and anthropically selected. We s...
Recently, a new mechanism to generate a naturally small electroweak scale has been proposed. This is...
International audienceWe present a cosmological solution to the electroweak hierarchy problem. After...
We propose a novel explanation for the smallness of the observed cosmological constant (CC). Regions...
We present a cosmological solution to the electroweak hierarchy problem. After discussing general fe...
We consider scale invariant models where the classical scale invariance is broken perturbatively by ...
We argue that the SM in the Higgs phase does not suffer form a 'hierarchy problem' and that similarl...
We discuss possible connections between several scales in particle physics and cosmology, such the t...
A large value of the cosmological constant (CC) is induced in the Standard Model (SM) of Elementary ...
Within conventional big bang cosmology, it has proven to be very difficult to understand why today’s...
One of the puzzles of the Standard Model is why the mass parameter which determines the scale of the...
LHC results do not confirm conventional natural solutions to the Higgs mass hierarchy problem, motiv...
We argue that the Standard Model (SM) in the Higgs phase does not suffer from a 'hierarchy problem' ...
AbstractIn the presence of large extra dimensions, the fundamental Planck scale can be much lower th...
We solve the cosmological constant puzzle by attributing its origin to gravitational self-energy of ...
The cosmological constant and the Higgs mass seem unnaturally small and anthropically selected. We s...
Recently, a new mechanism to generate a naturally small electroweak scale has been proposed. This is...
International audienceWe present a cosmological solution to the electroweak hierarchy problem. After...
We propose a novel explanation for the smallness of the observed cosmological constant (CC). Regions...
We present a cosmological solution to the electroweak hierarchy problem. After discussing general fe...
We consider scale invariant models where the classical scale invariance is broken perturbatively by ...
We argue that the SM in the Higgs phase does not suffer form a 'hierarchy problem' and that similarl...
We discuss possible connections between several scales in particle physics and cosmology, such the t...
A large value of the cosmological constant (CC) is induced in the Standard Model (SM) of Elementary ...
Within conventional big bang cosmology, it has proven to be very difficult to understand why today’s...
One of the puzzles of the Standard Model is why the mass parameter which determines the scale of the...
LHC results do not confirm conventional natural solutions to the Higgs mass hierarchy problem, motiv...
We argue that the Standard Model (SM) in the Higgs phase does not suffer from a 'hierarchy problem' ...
AbstractIn the presence of large extra dimensions, the fundamental Planck scale can be much lower th...
We solve the cosmological constant puzzle by attributing its origin to gravitational self-energy of ...
The cosmological constant and the Higgs mass seem unnaturally small and anthropically selected. We s...