4.7 Article

Effective field theory versus UV-complete model: vector boson scattering as a case study

Journal

EUROPEAN PHYSICAL JOURNAL C
Volume 81, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1140/epjc/s10052-021-09428-7

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) [396021762-TRR 257]

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Effective field theories are used to parameterize effects of beyond standard model physics in vector boson scattering, but their validity range may be limited at high energy. By studying UV-complete toy models, it is found that dimension-eight operators are crucial for an adequate description of models, but significant effects are only seen outside the validity range of EFT.
Effective field theories (EFT) are commonly used to parameterize effects of BSM physics in vector boson scattering (VBS). For Wilson coefficients which are large enough to produce presently observable effects, the validity range of the EFT represents only a fraction of the energy range covered by the LHC, however. In order to shed light on possible extrapolations into the high energy region, a class of UV-complete toy models, with extra SU(2) multiplets of scalars or of fermions with vector-like weak couplings, is considered. By calculating the Wilson coefficients up to energy-dimension eight, and full one-loop contributions to VBS due to the heavy multiplets, the EFT approach, with and without unitarization at high energy, is compared to the perturbative prediction. For high multiplicities, e.g. nonets of fermions, the toy models predict sizable effects in transversely polarized VBS, but only outside the validity range of the EFT. At lower energies, dimension-eight operators are needed for an adequate description of the models, providing another example that dimension-eight can be more important than dimension-six operators. A simplified VBFNLO implementation is used to estimate sensitivity of VBS to such BSM effects at the LHC. Unitarization captures qualitative features of the toy models at high energy but significantly underestimates signal cross sections in the threshold region of the new particles.

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