The anthropic principle and the mass scale of the Standard Model
Abstract
In theories in which different regions of the universe can have different values of the the physical parameters, we would naturally find ourselves in a region which has parameters favorable for life. We explore the range of anthropically allowed values of the mass parameter in the Higgs potential, μ2. For μ2<0, the requirement that complex elements be formed suggests that the Higgs vacuum expectation value v must have a magnitude less than 5 times its observed value. For μ2>0, baryon stability requires that |μ|<<MP, the Planck Mass. Smaller values of |μ2| may or may not be allowed depending on issues of element synthesis and stellar evolution. We conclude that the observed value of μ2 is reasonably typical of the anthropically allowed range, and that anthropic arguments provide a plausible explanation for the closeness of the QCD scale and the weak scale.
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