Naturalness (physics)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| This article is orphaned as few or no other articles link to it. Please help introduce links in articles on related topics. (April 2008) |
In particle physics, the assumption of naturalness means that unless a more detailed explanation exists, all conceivable terms in the effective action that preserve the required symmetries should appear in this effective action with natural coefficients. Natural coefficients have the form
- h = cΛ4 − d
where d is the dimension of the operator, Λ is the cutoff scale - energy, above which the effective field theory breaks down - and c is a "random" number comparable to one.
However, many parameters in the effective actions we know seem to have far smaller coefficients than required by naturalness. See
among other examples. These surprisingly small values seem to contradict naturalness.

