8,672 research outputs found
Searches for Sterile Neutrinos at Future Electron-Proton Colliders
Sterile neutrinos are an attractive extension of the Standard Model of
elementary particles towards including a mechanism for generating the observed
light neutrino masses. We discuss that when an approximate protective "lepton
number"-like symmetry is present, the sterile neutrinos can have masses around
the electroweak scale and potentially large neutrino Yukawa couplings, which
makes them well testable at planned future particle colliders. We
systematically discuss the production and decay channels for sterile neutrinos
at electron-proton colliders and give a complete list of the leading order
signatures for sterile neutrino searches. We highlight several novel search
channels and present a first look at the possible sensitivities for the
active-sterile mixing parameters and the heavy neutrino masses. We also compare
the performance of electron-proton colliders with the ones of proton-proton and
electron-positron colliders, and discuss the complementarity of the different
collider types.Comment: Conference proceedings for the DIS 2017 in Birmingham, 13 pages, 8
figures, 2 table
Testing sterile neutrino extensions of the Standard Model at future lepton colliders
Extending the Standard Model (SM) with sterile ('right-handed') neutrinos is
one of the best motivated ways to account for the observed neutrino masses. We
discuss the expected sensitivity of future lepton collider experiments for
probing such extensions. An interesting testable scenario is given by 'symmetry
protected seesaw models', which theoretically allow for sterile neutrino masses
around the electroweak scale with up to order one mixings with the light (SM)
neutrinos. In addition to indirect tests, e.g. via electroweak precision
observables, sterile neutrinos with masses around the electroweak scale can
also be probed by direct searches, e.g. via sterile neutrino decays at the Z
pole, deviations from the SM cross section for four lepton final states at and
beyond the WW threshold and via Higgs boson decays. We study the present bounds
on sterile neutrino properties from LEP and LHC as well as the expected
sensitivities of possible future lepton colliders such as ILC, CEPC and FCC-ee
(TLEP).Comment: Version 2: typos fixed, references added, matches published versio
Sterile neutrino searches via displaced vertices at LHCb
We explore the sensitivity of displaced vertex searches at LHCb for testing
sterile neutrino extensions of the Standard Model towards explaining the
observed neutrino masses. We derive estimates for the constraints on sterile
neutrino parameters from a recently published displaced vertex search at LHCb
based on run 1 data. They yield the currently most stringent limit on
active-sterile neutrino mixing in the sterile neutrino mass range between 4.5
GeV and 10 GeV. Furthermore, we present forecasts for the sensitivities that
could be obtained from the run 2 data and also for the high-luminosity phase of
the LHC.Comment: 5 pages, 6 Figures, 1 Table, version to appear in PL
Sterile neutrino searches at future , , and colliders
Sterile neutrinos are among the most attractive extensions of the SM to
generate the light neutrino masses observed in neutrino oscillation
experiments. When the sterile neutrinos are subject to a protective symmetry,
they can have masses around the electroweak scale and potentially large
neutrino Yukawa couplings, which makes them testable at planned future particle
colliders. We systematically discuss the production and decay channels at
electron-positron, proton-proton and electron-proton colliders and provide a
complete list of the leading order signatures for sterile neutrino searches.
Among other things, we discuss several novel search channels, and present a
first look at the possible sensitivities for the active-sterile mixings and the
heavy neutrino masses. We compare the performance of the different collider
types and discuss their complementarity.Comment: 20 pages + appendix + references, 21 figures, 10 Tables; added
references; extended discussion of displaced vertex searches at pp an ep
collider
Displaced vertex searches for sterile neutrinos at future lepton colliders
We investigate the sensitivity of future lepton colliders to displaced
vertices from the decays of long-lived heavy (almost sterile) neutrinos with
electroweak scale masses and detectable time of flight. As future lepton
colliders we consider the FCC-ee, the CEPC, and the ILC, searching at the
Z-pole and at the center-of-mass energies of 240, 350 and 500 GeV. For a
realistic discussion of the detector response to the displaced vertex signal
and the Standard Model background we consider the ILC's Silicon Detector (SiD)
as benchmark for the future lepton collider detectors. We find that displaced
vertices constitute a powerful search channel for sterile neutrinos, sensitive
to squared active-sterile mixing angles as small as .Comment: 13 pages plus references, 8 figures, 1 table, matches published
versio
Higgs production from sterile neutrinos at future lepton colliders
In scenarios with sterile (right-handed) neutrinos that are subject to an
approximate "lepton-number-like" symmetry, the heavy neutrinos (i.e. the mass
eigenstates) can have masses around the electroweak scale and couple to the
Higgs boson with, in principle, unsuppressed Yukawa couplings while accounting
for the smallness of the light neutrinos' masses. In these scenarios, the
on-shell production of heavy neutrinos and their subsequent decays into a light
neutrino and a Higgs boson constitutes a hitherto unstudied resonant
contribution to the Higgs production mechanism. We investigate the relevance of
this resonant mono-Higgs production mechanism in leptonic collisions, including
the present experimental constraints on the neutrino Yukawa couplings, and we
determine the sensitivity of future lepton colliders to the heavy neutrinos.
With Monte Carlo event sampling and a simulation of the detector response we
find that, at future lepton colliders, neutrino Yukawa couplings below the
percent level can lead to observable deviations from the SM and, furthermore,
the sensitivity improves with higher center-of-mass energies (for identical
integrated luminosities).Comment: 26 pages, 9 figures, 7 tables; v2: references adde
Prospects for Heavy Scalar Searches at the LHeC
In this article we study the prospects of the proposed Large Hadron electron
Collider (LHeC) in the search for heavy neutral scalar particles. We consider a
minimal model with one additional complex scalar singlet that interacts with
the Standard Model (SM) via mixing with the Higgs doublet, giving rise to a
SM-like Higgs boson and a heavy scalar particle . Both scalar
particles are produced via vector boson fusion and can be tested via their
decays into pairs of SM particles, analogously to the SM Higgs boson. Using
multivariate techniques we show that the LHeC is sensitive to with masses
between 200 and 800 GeV down to scalar mixing of
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