1,570 research outputs found
Signatures of Extra Gauge Bosons in the Littlest Higgs Model with T-parity at Future Colliders
We study the collider signatures of a T-odd gauge boson pair
production in the Littlest Higgs Model with T-parity (LHT) at Large Hadron
Collider (LHC) and Linear Collider (LC). At the LHC, we search for the
boson using its leptonic decay, i.e. , which
gives rise to a collider signature of \ell^{+}\ell^{\prime-}+\met. We
demonstrate that the LHC not only has a great potential of discovering the
boson in this channel, but also can probe enormous parameter space of
the LHT. Due to four missing particles in the final state, one cannot
reconstruct the mass of at the LHC. But such a mass measurement can be
easily achieved at the LC in the process of . We present an
algorithm of measuring the mass and spin of the boson at the LC.
Furthermore, we illustrate that the spin correlation between the boson and
its mother particle () can be used to distinguish the LHT from other new
physics models.Comment: version to appear in PRD (a few references added
Resummation Effects in the Search of SM Higgs Boson at Hadron Colliders
We examine the soft-gluon resummation effects, including the exact spin
correlations among the final state particles, in the search of the Standard
Model Higgs boson, via the process H\to ZZH\to WW$
mode, the acceptance rates of the signal events predicted by the resummation
and NLO calculations are almost the same, but some of the predicted kinematical
distributions are quite different. Thus, to precisely determine the properties
of the Higgs boson at hadron colliders, the soft-gluon resummation effects have
to be taken into account.Comment: The version to appear in PR
Same-Sign Dilepton Excesses and Vector-like Quarks
Multiple analyses from ATLAS and CMS collaborations, including searches for
ttH production, supersymmetric particles and vector-like quarks, observed
excesses in the same-sign dilepton channel containing b-jets and missing
transverse energy in the LHC Run 1 data. In the context of little Higgs
theories with T parity, we explain these excesses using vector-like T-odd
quarks decaying into a top quark, a W boson and the lightest T-odd particle
(LTP). For heavy vector-like quarks, decay topologies containing the LTP have
not been searched for at the LHC. The bounds on the masses of the T-odd quarks
can be estimated in a simplified model approach by adapting the search limits
for top/bottom squarks in supersymmetry. Assuming a realistic decay branching
fraction, a benchmark with a 750 GeV T-odd b-prime quark is proposed. We also
comment on the possibility to fit excesses in different analyses in a common
framework.Comment: 1+17 pages and 11 figure
Implications of the Little Higgs Dark Matter and T-odd Fermions
We study the phenomenology of dark matter in the Littlest Higgs model with
T-parity after the discovery of Higgs boson. We analyze the relic abundance of
dark matter, focusing on the effects of coannihilaitons with T-odd fermions.
After determining the parameter space that predicts the correct relic abundance
measured by WMAP and Planck collaborations, we evaluate the elastic scattering
cross section between dark matter and nucleon. In comparison with experimental
results, we find that the lower mass of dark matter is constrained mildly by
LUX 2013 while the future XENON experiment has potential to explore most of the
parameter space for both T-odd lepton and T-odd quark coannihilation scenarios.
We also study the collider signatures of T-odd fermion pair production at the
LHC. Even though the production cross sections are large, it turns out very
challenging to search for these T-odd fermions directly at the collider because
the visible charged leptons or jets are very soft. Furthermore, we show that,
with an extra hard jet radiated out from the initial state, the T-odd quark
pair production can contribute significantly to mono-jet plus missing energy
search at the LHC
Interpretations and Implications of the Top Quark Rapidity Asymmetries and
Forward-backward asymmetries and are observed in the
top quark rapidity distribution and in the rapidity distribution of charged
leptons from top quark decay at the Tevatron proton-antiproton collider,
and a charge asymmetry is seen in proton-proton collisions at the Large
Hadron Collider (LHC). In this paper, we update our previous studies of the
Tevatron asymmetries using the most recent data. We provide expectations for
at the LHC based first on model independent extrapolations from the
Tevatron, and second based on new physics models that can explain the Tevatron
asymmetries. We examine the relationship of the two asymmetries and
. We show their connection through the spin correlation
between the charged lepton and the top quark with different polarization
states. We show that the ratio of the two asymmetries provides independent
insight into new physics models that are invoked to fit the top quark
asymmetry. We emphasize the value of the measurement of both asymmetries, and
we conclude that a model which produces more right-handed than left-handed top
quarks is favored by the present Tevatron data.Comment: Some figures changed. A typo in appendix fixed. Published in Physical
Review
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