https://doi.org/10.1140/epjp/i2018-12250-4
Regular Article
Pitfalls of iterative pole mass calculation in electroweak multiplets
1
Department of Physics, Imperial College London, Blackett Laboratory, Prince Consort Road, SW7 2AZ, London, UK
2
School of Physics and Astronomy, Monash University, VIC, 3800, Melbourne, Australia
3
Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Particle Physics at the Tera-scale, Australia
* e-mail: j.mckay14@imperial.ac.uk
Received:
15
April
2018
Accepted:
12
September
2018
Published online:
30
October
2018
The radiatively induced mass splitting between components of an electroweak multiplet is typically of order 100 MeV. This is sufficient to endow the charged components with macroscopically observable lifetimes, and ensure an electrically neutral dark matter particle. We show that a commonly used iterative procedure to compute radiatively corrected pole masses can lead to very different mass splittings than a non-iterative calculation at the same loop order. By estimating the uncertainties of the two one-loop results, we show that the iterative procedure is significantly more sensitive to the choice of renormalisation scale and gauge parameter than the non-iterative method. This can cause the lifetime of the charged component to vary by up to 12 orders of magnitude if iteration is employed. We show that individual pole masses exhibit similar scale-dependence regardless of the procedure, but that the leading scale-dependent terms cancel when computing the mass splitting if and only if the non-iterative procedure is employed. We show that this behaviour persists at two-loop order: the precision of the mass splitting improves in the non-iterative approach, but our results suggest that higher-order corrections do not reduce the uncertainty in the iterative calculation enough to resolve the problem at two-loop order. We conclude that the iterative procedure should not be used for computing pole masses in situations where electroweak mass splittings are phenomenologically relevant.
© The Author(s), 2018