5,301 research outputs found

    Dark Matter and Indirect Detection in Cosmic Rays

    Full text link
    In the early years, cosmic rays contributed essentially to particle physics through the discovery of new particles. Will history repeat itself? As with the discovery of the charged pion, the recent discovery of a Higgs-like boson may portend a rich new set of particles within reach of current and near future experiments. These may be discovered and studied by cosmic rays through the indirect detection of dark matter.Comment: 8 pages, to appear in the Proceedings of Centenary Symposium 2012: Discovery of Cosmic Rays, Denver, Colorado, June 201

    Dark Matter Implications for Linear Colliders

    Full text link
    The existence of dark matter is currently one of the strongest motivations for physics beyond the standard model. Its implications for future colliders are discussed. In the case of neutralino dark matter, cosmological bounds do not provide useful upper limits on superpartner masses. However, in simple models, cosmological considerations do imply that for supersymmetry to be observable at a 500 GeV linear collider, some signature of supersymmetry must appear before the LHC.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, to appear in the proceedings of Linear Collider Workshop 2000, Fermilab, October 200

    Non-WIMP Candidates

    Full text link
    Non-WIMP dark matter candidates include particles motivated by minimality, candidates motivated by experimental anomalies, and exotic possibilities motivated primarily by the desire of clever iconoclasts to highlight how truly ignorant we are about the nature of dark matter. In this review, I discuss candidates that are not WIMPs, but nevertheless share the same theoretical motivations as WIMPs and also naturally have the correct relic density. There are two classes: superWIMP dark matter, where the desired relic density is inherited through decays, and WIMPless dark matter, where the dark matter's mass and couplings scale together to maintain the desired thermal relic density.Comment: 20 pages, published as Chapter 10, pp. 190-204, in Particle Dark Matter: Observations, Models and Searches, edited by Gianfranco Bertone (Cambridge University Press, 2010), available at http://cambridge.org/us/catalogue/catalogue.asp?isbn=978052176368

    Testing Supersymmetry at the Next Linear Collider

    Get PDF
    If new particles are discovered, it will be important to determine if they are the supersymmetric partners of standard model bosons and fermions. Supersymmetry predicts relations among the couplings and masses of these particles. We discuss the prospects for testing these relations at a future e+e−e^+e^- linear collider with measurements that exploit the availability of polarized beams.Comment: Talk presented at DPF'94, Albuquerque, New Mexico, Aug 2-6, 1994, 6 pages, Latex with world_sci.sty, 3 figures available upon request, SLAC-PUB-6662. (text with encapsulated figures available in ps form by anonymous ftp from preprint.slac.stanford.edu, directory pub/preprints/hep-ph/9409

    Naturalness and the Status of Supersymmetry

    Full text link
    For decades, the unnaturalness of the weak scale has been the dominant problem motivating new particle physics, and weak-scale supersymmetry has been the dominant proposed solution. This paradigm is now being challenged by a wealth of experimental data. In this review, we begin by recalling the theoretical motivations for weak-scale supersymmetry, including the gauge hierarchy problem, grand unification, and WIMP dark matter, and their implications for superpartner masses. These are set against the leading constraints on supersymmetry from collider searches, the Higgs boson mass, and low-energy constraints on flavor and CP violation. We then critically examine attempts to quantify naturalness in supersymmetry, stressing the many subjective choices that impact the results both quantitatively and qualitatively. Finally, we survey various proposals for natural supersymmetric models, including effective supersymmetry, focus point supersymmetry, compressed supersymmetry, and R-parity-violating supersymmetry, and summarize their key features, current status, and implications for future experiments.Comment: 38 pages, to appear in Annual Review of Nuclear and Particle Science; v2: fixed typos, updated Higgs results, added references and a parable, published versio

    ILC Cosmology

    Full text link
    Recent breakthroughs in cosmology pose questions that require particle physics answers. I review the problems of dark matter, baryogenesis, and dark energy and discuss how particle colliders, particularly the International Linear Collider, may advance our understanding of the contents and evolution of the Universe.Comment: 18 pages, Plenary Colloquium presented at the 2005 International Linear Collider Workshop, Stanford, California, USA, 18-22 March 200

    Dark Matter Phenomenology

    Full text link
    I review recent developments in the direct and indirect detection of dark matter and new candidates beyond the WIMP paradigm.Comment: 6 pages, to appear in the Proceedings of the Tenth Conference on the Intersections of Particle and Nuclear Physics (CIPANP 2009), San Diego, California, 26-31 May 200

    Tevatron Signatures of Long-lived Charged Sleptons in Gauge-Mediated Supersymmetry Breaking Models

    Get PDF
    In supersymmetric models with gauge-mediated supersymmetry breaking, charged sleptons are the next lightest supersymmetric particles and decay outside the detector for large regions of parameter space. In such scenarios, supersymmetry may be discovered by searches for a number of novel signals, including highly ionizing tracks from long-lived slow charged particles and excesses of multi-lepton signals. We consider this scenario in detail and find that the currently available Tevatron data probes regions of parameter space beyond the kinematic reach of LEP II. Future Tevatron runs with integrated luminosities of 2, 10, and 30 fb-1 probe right-handed slepton masses of 110, 180, and 230 GeV and Wino masses of 310, 370, and 420 GeV, respectively, greatly extending current search limits.Comment: Revtex, 30 pages, 15 figures, minor revisions to conform to published versio
    • 

    corecore