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Implications of Higgs Discovery for the Strong CP Problem and Unification
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A $Z_2$ symmetry that extends the weak interaction, $SU(2)_L \rightarrow SU(2)_L \times SU(2)'$, and the Higgs sector, $H(2) \rightarrow H(2,1) + H'(1,2)$, yields a Standard Model quartic coupling that vanishes at scale $v' = <H'>~\gg~<H>$. Near $v'$, theories either have a "prime" sector, or possess "Left-Right" (LR) symmetry with $SU(2)' = SU(2)_R$. If the $Z_2$ symmetry incorporates spacetime parity, these theories can solve the strong CP problem. The LR theories have all quark and lepton masses arising from operators of dimension 5 or more, requiring Froggatt-Nielsen structures. Two-loop contributions to $\bar{\theta}$ are estimated and typically lead to a neutron electric dipole moment of order $10^{-27}$e cm that can be observed in future experiments. Minimal models, with gauge group $SU(3) \times SU(2)_L \times SU(2)_L \times U(1)_{B-L}$, have precise gauge coupling unification for $v' = 10^{10\pm1}$ GeV, successfully correlating gauge unification with the observed Higgs mass of $125$ GeV. With $SU(3) \times U(1)_{B-L}$ embedded in $SU(4)$, the central value of the unification scale is reduced from $10^{16-17}$ GeV to below $10^{16}$ GeV, improving the likelihood of proton decay discovery. Unified theories based on $SO(10) \times CP$ are constructed that have $H+H'$ in a ${\bf 16}$ or ${\bf 144}$ and generate higher-dimensional flavor operators, while maintaining perturbative gauge couplings.
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