We study first-order electroweak phase transitions nonperturbatively, assuming any particles beyond the Standard Model are sufficiently heavy to be integrated out at the phase transition. Utilizing high temperature dimensional reduction, we perform lattice Monte Carlo simulations to calculate the main quantities characterizing the transition: the critical temperature, the latent heat, the surface tension and the bubble nucleation rate, updating and extending previous lattice studies. We focus on the region where the theory gives first-order phase transitions due to an effective reduction in the Higgs self-coupling and give a detailed comparison with perturbation theory.Peer reviewe
33 pages, 8 figuresInternational audienceWe compute the complete one-loop finite temperature effecti...
Perturbation theory alone fails to describe thermodynamics of the electroweak phase transition. We r...
This deposit contains data from Monte-Carlo and Langevin simulations of the SU(2) Higgs model, relat...
We study first-order electroweak phase transitions nonperturbatively, assuming any particles beyond ...
Making use of a dimensionally-reduced effective theory at high temperature, we perform a nonperturba...
We study the finite temperature electroweak transition with non-perturbative lattice Monte Carlo sim...
We discuss the electroweak phase-transition in the early universe, using non-perturbative flow equat...
We review the status of non-perturbative lattice studies of the electroweak phase transition. In the...
Kajantie K, Laine M, Rummukainen K, Shaposhnikov M. The electroweak phase transition: A non-perturba...
We present the first end-to-end nonperturbative analysis of the gravitational wave power spectrum fr...
New field content beyond that of the standard model of particle physics can alter the thermal histor...
The electroweak phase transition is investigated by means of the perturbatively calculated high temp...
We compare the results of renormalization-group and lattice studies for the properties of the electr...
We investigate the strongly first-order electroweak phase transition using an effective field theore...
Recent results of four-dimensional (4d) lattice simulations on the finite temperature electroweak ph...
33 pages, 8 figuresInternational audienceWe compute the complete one-loop finite temperature effecti...
Perturbation theory alone fails to describe thermodynamics of the electroweak phase transition. We r...
This deposit contains data from Monte-Carlo and Langevin simulations of the SU(2) Higgs model, relat...
We study first-order electroweak phase transitions nonperturbatively, assuming any particles beyond ...
Making use of a dimensionally-reduced effective theory at high temperature, we perform a nonperturba...
We study the finite temperature electroweak transition with non-perturbative lattice Monte Carlo sim...
We discuss the electroweak phase-transition in the early universe, using non-perturbative flow equat...
We review the status of non-perturbative lattice studies of the electroweak phase transition. In the...
Kajantie K, Laine M, Rummukainen K, Shaposhnikov M. The electroweak phase transition: A non-perturba...
We present the first end-to-end nonperturbative analysis of the gravitational wave power spectrum fr...
New field content beyond that of the standard model of particle physics can alter the thermal histor...
The electroweak phase transition is investigated by means of the perturbatively calculated high temp...
We compare the results of renormalization-group and lattice studies for the properties of the electr...
We investigate the strongly first-order electroweak phase transition using an effective field theore...
Recent results of four-dimensional (4d) lattice simulations on the finite temperature electroweak ph...
33 pages, 8 figuresInternational audienceWe compute the complete one-loop finite temperature effecti...
Perturbation theory alone fails to describe thermodynamics of the electroweak phase transition. We r...
This deposit contains data from Monte-Carlo and Langevin simulations of the SU(2) Higgs model, relat...