@phdthesis{Lang2017, author = {Lang, Jean-Nicolas Olivier}, title = {Automation of electroweak NLO corrections in general models}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-154426}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2017}, abstract = {The thesis deals with the automated generation and efficient evaluation of scattering amplitudes in general relativistic quantum field theories at one-loop order in perturbation theory. At the present time we lack signals beyond the Standard Model which, in the past, have guided the high-energy physics community, and ultimately led to the discovery of new physics phenomena. In the future, precision tests could acquire this guiding role by systematically probing the Standard Model and constraining Beyond the Standard Model theories. As current experimental constraints strongly favour Standard Model-like theories, only small deviations with respect to the Standard Model are expected which need to be studied in detail. The required precision demands one-loop corrections in all future analyses, ideally in a fully automated way, allowing to test a variety of observables in different models and in an effective field theory approach. In the process of achieving this goal we have developed an enhanced version of the tool Recola and on this basis the generalization Recola2. These tools represent fully automated tree- and one-loop-amplitude providers for the Standard Model, or in the case of Recola2 for general models. Concerning the algorithm, we use a purely numerical and fully recursive approach allowing for extreme calculations of yet unmatched complexity. Recola has led to the first computation involving 9-point functions. Beyond the Standard Model theories and Effective Field theories are integrated into the Recola2 framework as model files. Renormalized model files are produced with the newly developed tool Rept1l, which can perform the renormalization in a fully automated way, starting from nothing but Feynman rules. In view of validation, we have extended Recola2 to new gauges such as the Background-Field Method and the class of Rxi gauges. In particular, the Background-Field Method formulation for new theories serves as an automated validation, and is very useful in practical calculations and the formulation of renormalization conditions. We have applied the system to produce the first results for Higgs-boson production in Higgs strahlung and vector-boson fusion in the Two-Higgs-Doublet Model and the Higgs-Singlet Extension of the Standard Model. All in all, we have laid the foundation for an automated generation and computation of one-loop amplitudes within a large class of phenomenologically interesting theories. Furthermore, we enable the use of our system via a very flexible and dynamic control which does not require any intermediate intervention.}, subject = {Standardmodell }, language = {en} }