1,531 research outputs found
Gaugino and Scalar Masses in the Landscape
In this letter we demonstrate the genericity of suppressed gaugino masses M_a
\sim m_{3/2}/ln(M_P/m_{3/2}) in the IIB string landscape, by showing that this
relation holds for D7-brane gauginos whenever the associated modulus is
stabilised by nonperturbative effects. Although m_{3/2} and M_a take many
different values across the landscape, the above small mass hierarchy is
maintained. We show that it is valid for models with an arbitrary number of
moduli and applies to both the KKLT and exponentially large volume approaches
to Kahler moduli stabilisation. In the latter case we explicitly calculate
gaugino and moduli masses for compactifications on the two-modulus Calabi-Yau
P^4_[1,1,1,6,9]. In the large-volume scenario we also show that soft scalar
masses are approximately universal with m_i^2 \sim m_{3/2}^2 (1 + \epsilon_i),
with the non-universality parametrised by \epsilon_i \sim 1/ln (M_P/m_{3/2})^2
\sim 1/1000. We briefly discuss possible phenomenological implications of our
results.Comment: 15 pages, JHEP style; v2. reference adde
Constraints on LVS Compactifications of IIB String Theory
We argue that once all theoretical and phenomenological constraints are
imposed on the different versions of the Large Volume Scenario (LVS)
compactifications of type IIB string theory, one particular version is favored.
This is essentially a sequestered one in which the soft terms are generated by
Weyl anomaly and RG running effects. We also show that arguments questioning
sequestering in LVS models are not relevant in this case.Comment: 14 pages, additional discussion of D7 brane case and mSUGRA,
reference adde
Kahler Potentials of Chiral Matter Fields for Calabi-Yau String Compactifications
The Kahler potential is the least understood part of effective N=1
supersymmetric theories derived from string compactifications. Even at
tree-level, the Kahler potential for the physical matter fields, as a function
of the moduli fields, is unknown for generic Calabi-Yau compactifications and
has only been computed for simple toroidal orientifolds. In this paper we
describe how the modular dependence of matter metrics may be extracted in a
perturbative expansion in the Kahler moduli. Scaling arguments, locality and
knowledge of the structure of the physical Yukawa couplings are sufficient to
find the relevant Kahler potential. Using these techniques we compute the
`modular weights' for bifundamental matter on wrapped D7 branes for
large-volume IIB Calabi-Yau flux compactifications. We also apply our
techniques to the case of toroidal compactifications, obtaining results
consistent with those present in the literature. Our techniques do not provide
the complex structure moduli dependence of the Kahler potential, but are
sufficient to extract relevant information about the canonically normalised
matter fields and the soft supersymmetry breaking terms in gravity mediated
scenarios.Comment: JHEP style, 24 pages, 4 figures. v2: New section and reference adde
Sparticle Spectra and LHC Signatures for Large Volume String Compactifications
We study the supersymmetric particle spectra and LHC collider observables for
the large-volume string models with a fundamental scale of 10^{11} GeV that
arise in moduli-fixed string compactifications with branes and fluxes. The
presence of magnetic fluxes on the brane world volume, required for chirality,
perturb the soft terms away from those previously computed in the dilute-flux
limit. We use the difference in high-scale gauge couplings to estimate the
magnitude of this perturbation and study the potential effects of the magnetic
fluxes by generating many random spectra with the soft terms perturbed around
the dilute flux limit. Even with a 40% variation in the high-scale soft terms
the low-energy spectra take a clear and predictive form. The resulting spectra
are broadly similar to those arising on the SPS1a slope, but more degenerate.
In their minimal version the models predict the ratios of gaugino masses to be
M_1 : M_2 : M_3=(1.5 - 2) : 2 : 6, different to both mSUGRA and mirage
mediation. Among the scalars, the squarks tend to be lighter and the sleptons
heavier than for comparable mSUGRA models. We generate 10 fb^{-1} of sample LHC
data for the random spectra in order to study the range of collider
phenomenology that can occur. We perform a detailed mass reconstruction on one
example large-volume string model spectrum. 100 fb^{-1} of integrated
luminosity is sufficient to discriminate the model from mSUGRA and aspects of
the sparticle spectrum can be accurately reconstructed.Comment: 42 pages, 21 figures. Added references and discussion for section 3.
Slight changes in the tex
Towards Realistic String Vacua From Branes At Singularities
We report on progress towards constructing string models incorporating both
realistic D-brane matter content and moduli stabilisation with dynamical
low-scale supersymmetry breaking. The general framework is that of local
D-brane models embedded into the LARGE volume approach to moduli stabilisation.
We review quiver theories on del Pezzo () singularities including
both D3 and D7 branes. We provide supersymmetric examples with three
quark/lepton families and the gauge symmetries of the Standard, Left-Right
Symmetric, Pati-Salam and Trinification models, without unwanted chiral
exotics. We describe how the singularity structure leads to family symmetries
governing the Yukawa couplings which may give mass hierarchies among the
different generations. We outline how these models can be embedded into compact
Calabi-Yau compactifications with LARGE volume moduli stabilisation, and state
the minimal conditions for this to be possible. We study the general structure
of soft supersymmetry breaking. At the singularity all leading order
contributions to the soft terms (both gravity- and anomaly-mediation) vanish.
We enumerate subleading contributions and estimate their magnitude. We also
describe model-independent physical implications of this scenario. These
include the masses of anomalous and non-anomalous U(1)'s and the generic
existence of a new hyperweak force under which leptons and/or quarks could be
charged. We propose that such a gauge boson could be responsible for the ghost
muon anomaly recently found at the Tevatron's CDF detector.Comment: 40 pages, 10 figure
String theoretic QCD axion with stabilized saxion and the pattern of supersymmetry breaking
String theoretic axion is a prime candidate for the QCD axion solving the
strong CP problem. For a successful realization of the QCD axion in string
theory, one needs to stabilize moduli including the scalar partner (saxion) of
the QCD axion, while keeping the QCD axion unfixed until the low energy QCD
instanton effects are turned on. We note that a simple generalization of KKLT
moduli stabilization provides such set-up realizing the axion solution to the
strong CP problem. Although some details of moduli stabilization are different
from the original KKLT scenario, this set-up leads to the mirage mediation
pattern of soft SUSY breaking terms as in the KKLT case, preserving flavor and
CP as a consequence of approximate scaling and axionic shift symmetries. The
set-up also gives an interesting pattern of moduli masses which might avoid the
cosmological moduli, gravitino and axion problems.Comment: JHEP style, 21 pages, 3 figures; typos correcte
On the Effective Description of Large Volume Compactifications
We study the reliability of the Two-Step moduli stabilization in the type-IIB
Large Volume Scenarios with matter and gauge interactions. The general analysis
is based on a family of N=1 Supergravity models with a factorizable Kaehler
invariant function, where the decoupling between two sets of fields without a
mass hierarchy is easily understood. For the Large Volume Scenario particular
analyses are performed for explicit models, one of such developed for the first
time here, finding that the simplified version, where the Dilaton and Complex
structure moduli are regarded as frozen by a previous stabilization, is a
reliable supersymmetric description whenever the neglected fields stand at
their leading F-flatness conditions and be neutral. The terms missed by the
simplified approach are either suppressed by powers of the Calabi-Yau volume,
or are higher order operators in the matter fields, and then irrelevant for the
moduli stabilization rocedure. Although the power of the volume suppressing
such corrections depends on the particular model, up to the mass level it is
independent of the modular weight for the matter fields. This at least for the
models studied here but we give arguments to expect the same in general. These
claims are checked through numerical examples. We discuss how the factorizable
models present a context where despite the lack of a hierarchy with the
supersymmetry breaking scale, the effective theory still has a supersymmetric
description. This can be understood from the fact that it is possible to find
vanishing solution for the auxiliary components of the fields being integrated
out, independently of the remaining dynamics. Our results settle down the
question on the reliability of the way the Dilaton and Complex structure are
treated in type-IIB compactifications with large compact manifold volumina.Comment: 23 pages + 2 appendices (38 pages total). v2: minor improvements,
typos fixed. Version published in JHE
Sequestered Dark Matter
We show that hidden-sector dark matter is a generic feature of the type IIB
string theory landscape and that its lifetime may allow for a discovery through
the observation of very energetic gamma-rays produced in the decay. Throats or,
equivalently, conformally sequestered hidden sectors are common in flux
compactifications and the energy deposited in these sectors can be calculated
if the reheating temperature of the standard model sector is known. Assuming
that throats with various warp factors are available in the compact manifold,
we determine which throats maximize the late-time abundance of sequestered dark
matter. For such throats, this abundance agrees with cosmological data if the
standard model reheating temperature was 10^10 - 10^11 GeV. In two distinct
scenarios, the mass of dark matter particles, i.e. the IR scale of the throat,
is either around 10^5 GeV or around 10^10 GeV. The lifetime and the decay
channels of our dark matter candidates depend crucially on the fact that the
Klebanov-Strassler throat is supersymmetric. Furthermore, the details of
supersymmetry breaking both in the throat and in the visible sector play an
essential role. We identify a number of scenarios where this type of dark
matter can be discovered via gamma-ray observations.Comment: 36 pages, 3 figures; v2: references added, v3: introduction extended
and typos correcte
Dark Radiation and Dark Matter in Large Volume Compactifications
We argue that dark radiation is naturally generated from the decay of the
overall volume modulus in the LARGE volume scenario. We consider both
sequestered and non-sequestered cases, and find that the axionic superpartner
of the modulus is produced by the modulus decay and it can account for the dark
radiation suggested by observations, while the modulus decay through the
Giudice-Masiero term gives the dominant contribution to the total decay rate.
In the sequestered case, the lightest supersymmetric particles produced by the
modulus decay can naturally account for the observed dark matter density. In
the non-sequestered case, on the other hand, the supersymmetric particles are
not produced by the modulus decay, since the soft masses are of order the heavy
gravitino mass. The QCD axion will then be a plausible dark matter candidate.Comment: 27 pages, 4 figures; version 3: version published in JHE
Moduli Stabilisation and de Sitter String Vacua from Magnetised D7 Branes
Anomalous U(1)'s are ubiquitous in 4D chiral string models. Their presence
crucially affects the process of moduli stabilisation and cannot be neglected
in realistic set-ups. Their net effect in the 4D effective action is to induce
a matter field dependence in the non-perturbative superpotential and a
Fayet-Iliopoulos D-term. We study flux compactifications of IIB string theory
in the presence of magnetised D7 branes. These give rise to anomalous U(1)'s
that modify the standard moduli stabilisation procedure. We consider simple
orientifold models to determine the matter field spectrum and the form of the
effective field theory. We apply our results to one-modulus KKLT and
multi-moduli large volume scenarios, in particular to the Calabi-Yau
P^4_{[1,1,1,6,9]}. After stabilising the matter fields, the effective action
for the Kahler moduli can acquire an extra positive term that can be used for
de Sitter lifting with non-vanishing F- and D-terms. This provides an explicit
realization of the D-term lifting proposal of hep-th/0309187.Comment: 35 pages, 1 figure. v2: Minor changes, references adde
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