31 research outputs found
Loop-induced photon spectral lines from neutralino annihilation in the NMSSM
We have computed the loop-induced processes of neutralino annihilation into
two photons and, for the first time, into a photon and a Z boson in the
framework of the NMSSM. The photons produced from these radiative modes are
monochromatic and possess a clear "smoking gun" experimental signature. This
numerical analysis has been done with the help of the SloopS code, initially
developed for automatic one-loop calculation in the MSSM. We have computed the
rates for different benchmark points coming from SUGRA and GMSB soft SUSY
breaking scenarios and compared them with the MSSM. We comment on how this
signal can be enhanced, with respect to the MSSM, especially in the low mass
region of the neutralino. We also discuss the possibility of this observable to
constrain the NMSSM parameter space, taking into account the latest limits from
the FERMI collaboration on these two modes.Comment: 18 pages, 3 figures. Minor clarifications added in the text. Typing
mistakes and references corrected. Matches published versio
Light neutralino dark matter in the MSSM and its implication for LHC searches for staus
It was shown in a previous study that a lightest neutralino with mass below
30 GeV was severely constrained in the minimal supersymmetric standard model
(MSSM), unless it annihilates via a light stau and thus yields the observed
dark matter abundance. In such a scenario, while the stau is the
next-to-lightest supersymmetric particle (NLSP), the charginos and the other
neutralinos as well as sleptons of the first two families are also likely to be
not too far above the mass bounds laid down by the Large Electron Positron
(LEP) collider. As the branching ratios of decays of the charginos and the
next-to-lightest neutralino into staus are rather large, one expects
significant rates of tau-rich final states in such a case. With this in view,
we investigate the same-sign ditau and tri-tau signals of this scenario at the
Large Hadron Collider (LHC) for two MSSM benchmark points corresponding to
light neutralino dark matter. The associated signal rates for these channels
are computed, for the centre-of-mass energy of 14 TeV. We find that both
channels lead to appreciable rates if the squarks and the gluino are not too
far above a TeV, thus allowing to probe scenarios with light neutralinos in the
14 TeV LHC run with 10-100 fb^{-1}.Comment: 19p, 4 Fig
Directional detection of Dark Matter
Directional detection is a promising Dark Matter search strategy. Taking
advantage on the rotation of the Solar system around the galactic center
through the Dark Matter halo, it allows to show a direction dependence of WIMP
events. It requires the simultaneous measurement of the energy and the 3D track
of low energy recoils, which is a common challenge for all current projects of
directional detectors. The third CYGNUS workshop on directional dark matter
detection has brought together the scientific community working on both
theoretical and experimental aspects of the subject. In this paper, we give an
introductory revue of directional detection of Dark Matter, focusing on the
main recent progresses.Comment: Proceedings of the 3rd International conference on Directional
Detection of Dark Matter (CYGNUS 2011), Aussois, France, 8-10 June 201
The Higgs sector of the phenomenological MSSM in the light of the Higgs boson discovery
The long awaited discovery of a new light scalar at the LHC opens up a new
era of studies of the Higgs sector in the SM and its extensions. In this paper
we discuss the consequences of the observation of a light Higgs boson with the
mass and rates reported by the ATLAS and CMS collaborations on the parameter
space of the phenomenological MSSM, including also the so far unsuccessful LHC
searches for the heavier Higgs bosons and supersymmetric particle partners in
missing transverse momentum as well as the constraints from B physics and dark
matter. We explore the various regimes of the MSSM Higgs sector depending on
the parameters MA and tan beta and show that only two of them are still allowed
by all present experimental constraints: the decoupling regime where there is
only one light and standard--like Higgs boson and the supersymmetric regime in
which there are light supersymmetric particle partners affecting the decay
properties of the Higgs boson, in particular its di-photon and invisible
decays.Comment: 21 pages, 9 figures v2 - Discussion of the impact of LHC data
extended, scan statistics increased, a few figures added and typos correcte
Dark Matter in 3D
We discuss the relevance of directional detection experiments in the
post-discovery era and propose a method to extract the local dark matter phase
space distribution from directional data. The first feature of this method is a
parameterization of the dark matter distribution function in terms of integrals
of motion, which can be analytically extended to infer properties of the global
distribution if certain equilibrium conditions hold. The second feature of our
method is a decomposition of the distribution function in moments of a model
independent basis, with minimal reliance on the ansatz for its functional form.
We illustrate our method using the Via Lactea II N-body simulation as well as
an analytical model for the dark matter halo. We conclude that O(1000) events
are necessary to measure deviations from the Standard Halo Model and constrain
or measure the presence of anisotropies.Comment: 36 pages, 13 figure
Dark Matter and Higgs Mass in the CMSSM with Yukawa Quasi-Unification
We present an updated analysis of the constrained minimal supersymmetric
standard model with mu>0 supplemented by an `asymptotic' Yukawa coupling
quasi-unification condition, which allows an acceptable b-quark mass. Imposing
constraints from the cold dark matter abundance in the universe, B physics, the
muon anomalous magnetic moment, and the mass m_h of the lightest neutral
CP-even Higgs boson, we find that the lightest neutralino cannot act as a cold
dark matter candidate. This is mainly because the upper bound on the lightest
neutralino relic abundance from cold dark matter considerations, despite the
fact that this abundance is drastically reduced by neutralino-stau
coannihilations, is incompatible with the recent data on the branching ratio of
B_s --> mu^+ mu^-. Allowing for a different particle, such as the axino or the
gravitino, to be the lightest supersymmetric particle and, thus, constitute the
cold dark matter in the universe, we find that the predicted m_h's in our model
favor the range (119-126) GeV.Comment: 13 pages including 4 figures and 1 table, talk given by G. Lazarides
at the 7th International Workshop on the Dark Side of the Universe, KITPC,
Beijing, China, September 26-30, 2011 (to appear in the proceedings