21 research outputs found
Indirect Searches for -like Resonances at the LHC
We explore the possibility of indirectly observing the effects of -like
particles with electroweak strength couplings in the Drell-Yan channel at the
LHC with masses above the resonance direct search reach. We find that, mostly
due to statistical limitations, this is very unlikely in almost all classes of
models independently of the spin of the resonance. Not unexpectedly, the one
possible exception to this general result is the case of degenerate
Kaluza-Klein (KK) excitations of the photon and that occur in some
extra-dimensional models. In this special case, the strong destructive
interference with the Standard Model (SM) exchanges below the resonance mass
leads to a well-known significant suppression of the cross section and thus
increased sensitivity to this particular new physics scenario.Comment: 18 pages, 6 figs, discussion and reference adde
The Higgs intense--coupling regime in constrained SUSY models and its astrophysical implications
We analyze the Higgs intense--coupling regime, in which all Higgs particles
of the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model are light with masses of the same
order and the value of \tb the ratio of vacuum expectation values of the two
Higgs fields is large, in the framework of Supergravity scenarios with
non--universal soft Supersymmetry breaking scalar masses in the Higgs sector.
In particular, we calculate the relic density abundance of the lightest
neutralino candidate for cold dark matter and the rates in direct and indirect
detection at present and future experiments. We first show that while in the
mSUGRA model this regime is disfavored by present data, there are regions in
the parameter space of models with non--universal Higgs masses where it can
occur. We then show that because of the large value of and the
relatively low values of the neutral Higgs boson masses, the cross section for
neutralino--nucleon scattering is strongly enhanced in this regime and would
allow for the observation of a signal in direct detection experiments such as
CDMS--Soudan. The expected sensitivity of gamma--ray detectors like GLAST might
be also sufficient to observe the annihilation of neutralinos in such a regime.Comment: 19 pages, 5 figure
Langevin dynamics of the Lebowitz-Percus model
We revisit the hard-spheres lattice gas model in the spherical approximation
proposed by Lebowitz and Percus (J. L. Lebowitz, J. K. Percus, Phys. Rev.{\
144} (1966) 251). Although no disorder is present in the model, we find that
the short-range dynamical restrictions in the model induce glassy behavior. We
examine the off-equilibrium Langevin dynamics of this model and study the
relaxation of the density as well as the correlation, response and overlap
two-time functions. We find that the relaxation proceeds in two steps as well
as absence of anomaly in the response function. By studying the violation of
the fluctuation-dissipation ratio we conclude that the glassy scenario of this
model corresponds to the dynamics of domain growth in phase ordering kinetics.Comment: 21 pages, RevTeX, 14 PS figure
Neutralino, axion and axino cold dark matter in minimal, hypercharged and gaugino AMSB
Supersymmetric models based on anomaly-mediated SUSY breaking (AMSB)
generally give rise to a neutral wino as a WIMP cold dark matter (CDM)
candidate, whose thermal abundance is well below measured values. Here, we
investigate four scenarios to reconcile AMSB dark matter with the measured
abundance: 1. non-thermal wino production due to decays of scalar fields ({\it
e.g} moduli), 2. non-thermal wino production due to decays of gravitinos, 3.
non-thermal wino production due to heavy axino decays, and 4. the case of an
axino LSP, where the bulk of CDM is made up of axions and thermally produced
axinos. In cases 1 and 2, we expect wino CDM to constitute the entire measured
DM abundance, and we investigate wino-like WIMP direct and indirect detection
rates. Wino direct detection rates can be large, and more importantly, are
bounded from below, so that ton-scale noble liquid detectors should access all
of parameter space for m_{\tz_1}\alt 500 GeV. Indirect wino detection rates via
neutrino telescopes and space-based cosmic ray detectors can also be large. In
case 3, the DM would consist of an axion plus wino admixture, whose exact
proportions are very model dependent. In this case, it is possible that both an
axion and a wino-like WIMP could be detected experimentally. In case 4., we
calculate the re-heat temperature of the universe after inflation. In this
case, no direct or indirect WIMP signals should be seen, although direct
detection of relic axions may be possible. For each DM scenario, we show
results for the minimal AMSB model, as well as for the hypercharged and gaugino
AMSB models.Comment: 29 pages including 13 figure
Charged Particles in a 2+1 Curved Background
The coupling to a 2+1 background geometry of a quantized charged test
particle in a strong magnetic field is analyzed. Canonical operators adapting
to the fast and slow freedoms produce a natural expansion in the inverse square
root of the magnetic field strength. The fast freedom is solved to the second
order.
At any given time, space is parameterized by a couple of conjugate operators
and effectively behaves as the `phase space' of the slow freedom. The slow
Hamiltonian depends on the magnetic field norm, its covariant derivatives, the
scalar curvature and presents a peculiar coupling with the spin-connection.Comment: 22 page
The Highest Energy Neutrinos
Measurements of the arrival directions of cosmic rays have not revealed their
sources. High energy neutrino telescopes attempt to resolve the problem by
detecting neutrinos whose directions are not scrambled by magnetic fields. The
key issue is whether the neutrino flux produced in cosmic ray accelerators is
detectable. It is believed that the answer is affirmative, both for the
galactic and extragalactic sources, provided the detector has kilometer-scale
dimensions. We revisit the case for kilometer-scale neutrino detectors in a
model-independent way by focussing on the energetics of the sources. The real
breakthrough though has not been on the theory but on the technology front: the
considerable technical hurdles to build such detectors have been overcome.
Where extragalactic cosmic rays are concerned an alternative method to probe
the accelerators consists in studying the arrival directions of neutrinos
produced in interactions with the microwave background near the source, i.e.
within a GZK radius. Their flux is calculable within large ambiguities but, in
any case, low. It is therefore likely that detectors that are larger yet by
several orders of magnitudes are required. These exploit novel techniques, such
as detecting the secondary radiation at radio wavelengths emitted by neutrino
induced showers.Comment: 16 pages, pdflatex, 7 jpg figures, ICRC style files included.
Highlight talk presented at the 30th International Cosmic Ray Conference,
Merida, Mexico, 200
Phenomenology of the constrained NMSSM
We discuss several phenomenological aspects of the fully constrained version
of the next-to-minimal supersymmetric extension of the standard model (cNMSSM).
Assuming universal boundary conditions at a high energy scale for the soft
supersymmetry-breaking gaugino, sfermion and Higgs masses as well as for the
trilinear interactions, we find that the model can satisfy all present
constraints from colliders and cosmological data on dark matter, B- and
muon-physics. The phenomenologically viable region of the parameter space of
the cNMSSM can be described by essentially one single parameter as the
universal gaugino mass parameter M_{1/2}, and corresponds to small values for
the universal scalar mass m_0. The lightest supersymmetric particle is always a
singlino-like neutralino that is almost degenerate with the lightest tau
slepton. We study the particle spectrum of the model and its signatures at the
LHC, such as possibly long-lived tau sleptons at the end of decay chains, that
would distinguish the cNMSSM from the constrained MSSM.Comment: 30 pages, 14 figures, references and comments adde
Gluon mass generation in the PT-BFM scheme
In this article we study the general structure and special properties of the
Schwinger-Dyson equation for the gluon propagator constructed with the pinch
technique, together with the question of how to obtain infrared finite
solutions, associated with the generation of an effective gluon mass.
Exploiting the known all-order correspondence between the pinch technique and
the background field method, we demonstrate that, contrary to the standard
formulation, the non-perturbative gluon self-energy is transverse
order-by-order in the dressed loop expansion, and separately for gluonic and
ghost contributions. We next present a comprehensive review of several subtle
issues relevant to the search of infrared finite solutions, paying particular
attention to the role of the seagull graph in enforcing transversality, the
necessity of introducing massless poles in the three-gluon vertex, and the
incorporation of the correct renormalization group properties. In addition, we
present a method for regulating the seagull-type contributions based on
dimensional regularization; its applicability depends crucially on the
asymptotic behavior of the solutions in the deep ultraviolet, and in particular
on the anomalous dimension of the dynamically generated gluon mass. A
linearized version of the truncated Schwinger-Dyson equation is derived, using
a vertex that satisfies the required Ward identity and contains massless poles
belonging to different Lorentz structures. The resulting integral equation is
then solved numerically, the infrared and ultraviolet properties of the
obtained solutions are examined in detail, and the allowed range for the
effective gluon mass is determined. Various open questions and possible
connections with different approaches in the literature are discussed.Comment: 54 pages, 24 figure
A Collider Signature of the Supersymmetric Golden Region
Null results of experimental searches for the Higgs boson and the
superpartners imply a certain amount of fine-tuning in the electroweak sector
of the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model (MSSM). The "golden region" in the
MSSM parameter space is the region where the experimental constraints are
satisfied and the amount of fine-tuning is minimized. In this region, the stop
trilinear soft term is large, leading to a significant mass splitting between
the two stop mass eigenstates. As a result, the decay of the heavier stop into
the lighter stop and a Z boson is kinematically allowed throughout the golden
region. We propose that the experiments at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) can
search for this decay through an inclusive signature, Z+2jb+missing Et+X. We
evaluate the Standard Model backgrounds for this channel, and identify a set of
cuts that would allow detection of the supersymmetric contribution at the LHC
for the MSSM parameters typical of the golden region. We also discuss other
possible interpretations of a signal for new physics in the Z+2jb+missing Et+X
channel, and suggest further measurements that could be used to distinguish
among these interpretations.Comment: 23 pages, 5 figures. New in v4: an error fixed in Eq. (13); results
unaffecte
Inflation in Realistic D-Brane Models
We find successful models of D-brane/anti-brane inflation within a string
context. We work within the GKP-KKLT class of type IIB string vacua for which
many moduli are stabilized through fluxes, as recently modified to include
`realistic' orbifold sectors containing standard-model type particles. We allow
all moduli to roll when searching for inflationary solutions and find that
inflation is not generic inasmuch as special choices must be made for the
parameters describing the vacuum. But given these choices inflation can occur
for a reasonably wide range of initial conditions for the brane and antibrane.
We find that D-terms associated with the orbifold blowing-up modes play an
important role in the inflationary dynamics. Since the models contain a
standard-model-like sector after inflation, they open up the possibility of
addressing reheating issues. We calculate predictions for the CMB temperature
fluctuations and find that these can be consistent with observations, but are
generically not deep within the scale-invariant regime and so can allow
appreciable values for as well as predicting a potentially
observable gravity-wave signal. It is also possible to generate some admixture
of isocurvature fluctuations.Comment: 39 pages, 21 figures; added references; identified parameters
combining successful inflation with strong warping, as needed for consistency
of the approximation