1,049 research outputs found
Reconstruction of the Extended Gauge Structure from Observables at Future Colliders
The discovery of a new neutral gauge boson with a mass in the TeV region
would allow for determination of gauge couplings of the to ordinary quarks
and leptons in a model independent way. We show that these couplings in turn
would allow us to determine the nature of the extended gauge structure. As a
prime example we study the group. In this case two discrete constraints
on experimentally determined couplings have to be satisfied. If so, the
couplings would then uniquely determine the two parameters, and
, which fully specify the nature of the within . If the
is part of the gauge structure, then for TeV and
could be determined to around at the future colliders. The NLC
provides a unique determination of the two constraints as well as of and , though with slightly larger error bars than at the LHC. On
the other hand, since the LHC primarily determines three out of four normalized
couplings, it provides weaker constraints for the underlying gauge structure.Comment: 14 pages LaTeX using RevTeX and psfig.sty. TeX source and 3 PS
figures, tarred, compressed and uuencoded; also available via anonymous ftp
to ftp://dept.physics.upenn.edu/pub/Cvetic/UPR-636-T
Model-Independent Searches for New Quarks at the LHC
New vector-like quarks can have sizable couplings to first generation quarks
without conflicting with current experimental constraints. The coupling with
valence quarks and unique kinematics make single production the optimal
discovery process. We perform a model-independent analysis of the discovery
reach at the Large Hadron Collider for new vector-like quarks considering
single production and subsequent decays via electroweak interactions. An early
LHC run with 7 TeV center of mass energy and 1 fb-1 of integrated luminosity
can probe heavy quark masses up to 1 TeV and can be competitive with the
Tevatron reach of 10 fb-1. The LHC with 14 TeV center of mass energy and 100
fb-1 of integrated luminosity can probe heavy quark masses up to 3.7 TeV for
order one couplings.Comment: 37 pages, 11 figures, 7 table
Z' Decays into Four Fermions
If a new is discovered with a mass at LHC/SSC, its (rare)
decays into two charged leptons plus missing transverse energy will probe the
coupling to the lepton doublet and to , allowing
further discrimination among extended electroweak models.Comment: 9 pages plus 1 figure (not included but available), UG-FT-22/9
The Effective Lagrangian for Bulk Fermions in Models with Extra Dimensions
We compute the dimension 6 effective Lagrangian arising from the tree level
integration of an arbitrary number of bulk fermions in models with warped extra
dimensions. The coefficients of the effective operators are written in terms of
simple integrals of the metric and are valid for arbitrary warp factors, with
or without an infrared brane, and for a general Higgs profile. All relevant
tree level fermion effects in electroweak and flavor observables can be
computed using this effective Lagrangian.Comment: 22 pages. V2: typos corrected, matches published versio
Direct collider signatures of large extra dimensions
The realization of low (TeV) scale strings usually requires the existence of
large (TeV) extra dimensions where gauge bosons live. The direct production of
Kaluza-Klein excitations of the photon and Z-boson at present and future
colliders is studied in this work. At the LEPII, NLC and Tevatron colliders,
these Kaluza-Klein modes lead to deviations from the standard model
cross-sections, which provide lower bounds on their mass. At the LHC the
corresponding resonances can be produced and decay on-shell, triggering a
characteristic pattern in the distribution of the dilepton invariant mass.Comment: 14 pages, LateX, 5 figure
Radiative corrections to the lightest KK states in the T^2/(Z_2\times Z_2') orbifold
We study radiative corrections localized in the fixed points of the orbifold
for the field theory in six dimensions with two dimensions compactified on the
orbifold in a specific realistic model for low energy
physics that solves the proton decay and neutrino mass problem. We calculate
corrections to the masses of the lightest stable KK modes, which could be the
candidates for the dark matter.Comment: 14 pages, 2 figure
Off-the-Wall Higgs in the Universal Randall-Sundrum Model
We outline a consistent Randall-Sundrum (RS) framework in which a fundamental
5-dimensional Higgs doublet induces electroweak symmetry breaking (EWSB). In
this framework of a warped Universal Extra Dimension, the lightest Kaluza-Klein
(KK) mode of the bulk Higgs is tachyonic leading to a vacuum expectation value
(vev) at the TeV scale. The consistency of this picture imposes a set of
constraints on the parameters in the Higgs sector. A novel feature of our
scenario is the emergence of an adjustable bulk profile for the Higgs vev. We
also find a tower of non-tachyonic Higgs KK modes at the weak scale. We
consider an interesting implementation of this ``Off-the-Wall Higgs'' mechanism
where the 5-dimensional curvature-scalar coupling alone generates the tachyonic
mode responsible for EWSB. In this case, additional relations among the
parameters of the Higgs and gravitational sectors are established. We discuss
the experimental signatures of the bulk Higgs in general, and those of the
``Gravity-Induced'' EWSB in particular.Comment: 27 pages, 4 figure
Modified spontaneous symmetry breaking pattern by brane-bulk interaction terms
We show how translational invariance can be broken by the vacuum that drives
the spontaneous symmetry breaking of extra-dimensional extensions of the
Standard Model, when delta-like interactions between brane and bulk scalar
fields are present. We explicitly build some examples of vacuum configurations,
which induce the spontaneous symmetry breaking, and have non trivial profile in
the extra coordinate.Comment: 13 pages, two figure
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