107 research outputs found
Non-Canonical MSSM, Unification, And New Particles At The LHC
We consider non-canonical embeddings of the MSSM in high-dimensional orbifold
GUTs based on the gauge symmetry SU(N), N=5,6,7,8. The hypercharge
normalization factor k_Y can either have unique non-canonical values, such as
23/21 in a six-dimensional SU(7) model, or may lie in a (continuous) interval.
Gauge coupling unification and gauge-Yukawa unification can be realized in
these models by introducing new particles with masses in the TeV range which
may be found at the LHC. In one such example there exist color singlet
fractionally charged states.Comment: 1+25 pages, 5 figures. v2: Introduction revised, sections reordered,
figure 4 correcte
Neutrino masses along with fermion mass hierarchy
Recently a new mechanism has been proposed to cure the problem of fermion
mass hierarchy in the Standard Model (SM) model. In this scenario, all SM
charged fermions other than top quark arise from higher dimensional operators
involving the SM Higgs field. This model also predicted some interesting
phenomenology of the Higgs boson. We generalize this model to accommodate
neutrino masses (Dirac & Majorana) and also obtain the mixing pattern in the
leptonic sector. To generate neutrino masses, we add extra three right handed
neutrinos in this model.Comment: 20 pages, the content on results and phenomenology have been
expanded, a new section on UV completion of the model has been added and also
some new references, this version has been accepted by Physical Review
An Alternative Yukawa Unified SUSY Scenario
Supersymmetric SO(10) Grand Unified Theories with Yukawa unification
represent an appealing possibility for physics beyond the Standard Model.
However Yukawa unification is made difficult by large threshold corrections to
the bottom mass. Generally one is led to consider models where the sfermion
masses are large in order to suppress these corrections. Here we present
another possibility, in which the top and bottom GUT scale Yukawa couplings are
equal to a component of the charged lepton Yukawa matrix at the GUT scale in a
basis where this matrix is not diagonal. Physically, this weak eigenstate
Yukawa unification scenario corresponds to the case where the charged leptons
that are in the 16 of SO(10) containing the top and bottom quarks mix with
their counterparts in another SO(10) multiplet. Diagonalizing the resulting
Yukawa matrix introduces mixings in the neutrino sector. Specifically we find
that for a large region of parameter space with relatively light sparticles,
and which has not been ruled out by current LHC or other data, the mixing
induced in the neutrino sector is such that , in
agreement with data. The phenomenological implications are analyzed in some
detail.Comment: 32 pages, 22 Figure
Dynamically Induced Spontaneous Symmetry Breaking in 3-3-1 Models
We show that in SU(3)_C X SU(3)_L X U(1)_N (3-3-1) models embedded with a
singlet scalar playing the role of the axion, after imposing scale invariance,
dynamical symmetry breaking of Peccei-Quinn symmetry occurs through the
one-loop effective potential for the singlet field. We, then, analyze the
structure of spontaneous symmetry breaking by studying the new scalar potential
for the model, and verify that electroweak symmetry breaking is tightly
connected to the 3-3-1 breaking by the strong constraints among their vacuum
expectation values. This offers a valuable guide to write down the correct
pattern of symmetry breaking for multi-scalar theories. We also obtained that
the accompanying massive pseudo-scalar, instead of acquiring mass of order of
Peccei-Quinn scale as we would expect, develops a mass at a much lower scale, a
consequence solely of the dynamical breaking.Comment: 12 pages, typos corrected, improved text, conclusions unchange
Unification Picture in Minimal Supersymmetric SU(5) Model with String Remnants
The significant heavy threshold effect is found in the supersymmetric SU(5)
model with two adjoint scalars, one of which is interpreted as a massive string
mode decoupled from the lower-energy particle spectra. This threshold related
with the generic mass splitting of the basic adjoint moduli is shown to alter
properly the running of gauge couplings, thus giving a natural solution to the
string-scale grand unification as prescribed at low energies by LEP precision
measurements and minimal particle content. The further symmetry condition of
the (top-bottom) Yukawa and gauge coupling superunification at a string scale
results in the perfectly working predictions for the top and bottom quark
masses in the absence of any large supersymmetric threshold corrections.Comment: published versio
Vacuum stability, neutrinos, and dark matter
Motivated by the discovery hint of the Standard Model (SM) Higgs mass around
125 GeV at the LHC, we study the vacuum stability and perturbativity bounds on
Higgs scalar of the SM extensions including neutrinos and dark matter (DM).
Guided by the SM gauge symmetry and the minimal changes in the SM Higgs
potential we consider two extensions of neutrino sector (Type-I and Type-III
seesaw mechanisms) and DM sector (a real scalar singlet (darkon) and minimal
dark matter (MDM)) respectively. The darkon contributes positively to the
function of the Higgs quartic coupling and can stabilize the
SM vacuum up to high scale. Similar to the top quark in the SM we find the
cause of instability is sensitive to the size of new Yukawa couplings between
heavy neutrinos and Higgs boson, namely, the scale of seesaw mechanism. MDM and
Type-III seesaw fermion triplet, two nontrivial representations of
group, will bring the additional positive contributions to the gauge coupling
renormalization group (RG) evolution and would also help to stabilize
the electroweak vacuum up to high scale.Comment: 18 pages, 15 figures; published versio
Implications of Canonical Gauge Coupling Unification in High-Scale Supersymmetry Breaking
We systematically construct two kinds of models with canonical gauge coupling
unification and universal high-scale supersymmetry breaking. In the first we
introduce standard vector-like particles while in the second we also include
non-standard vector-like particles. We require that the gauge coupling
unification scale is from 5 x 10^{15} GeV to the Planck scale, that the
universal supersymmetry breaking scale is from 10 TeV to the unification scale,
and that the masses of the vector-like particles (M_V) are universal and in the
range from 200 GeV to 1 TeV. Using two-loop renormalization group equation
(RGE) running for the gauge couplings and one-loop RGE running for Yukawa
couplings and the Higgs quartic coupling, we calculate the supersymmetry
breaking scales, the gauge coupling unification scales, and the corresponding
Higgs mass ranges. When the vector-like particle masses are less than 1 TeV,
these models can be tested at the LHC.Comment: 25 pages, 4 figure
Fine-tuning implications for complementary dark matter and LHC SUSY searches
The requirement that SUSY should solve the hierarchy problem without undue
fine-tuning imposes severe constraints on the new supersymmetric states. With
the MSSM spectrum and soft SUSY breaking originating from universal scalar and
gaugino masses at the Grand Unification scale, we show that the low-fine-tuned
regions fall into two classes that will require complementary collider and dark
matter searches to explore in the near future. The first class has relatively
light gluinos or squarks which should be found by the LHC in its first run. We
identify the multijet plus E_T^miss signal as the optimal channel and determine
the discovery potential in the first run. The second class has heavier gluinos
and squarks but the LSP has a significant Higgsino component and should be seen
by the next generation of direct dark matter detection experiments. The
combined information from the 7 TeV LHC run and the next generation of direct
detection experiments can test almost all of the CMSSM parameter space
consistent with dark matter and EW constraints, corresponding to a fine-tuning
not worse than 1:100. To cover the complete low-fine-tuned region by SUSY
searches at the LHC will require running at the full 14 TeV CM energy; in
addition it may be tested indirectly by Higgs searches covering the mass range
below 120 GeV.Comment: References added. Version accepted for publication in JHE
General Gauge and Anomaly Mediated Supersymmetry Breaking in Grand Unified Theories with Vector-Like Particles
In Grand Unified Theories (GUTs) from orbifold and various string
constructions the generic vector-like particles do not need to form complete
SU(5) or SO(10) representations. To realize them concretely, we present
orbifold SU(5) models, orbifold SO(10) models where the gauge symmetry can be
broken down to flipped SU(5) X U(1)_X or Pati-Salam SU(4)_C X SU(2)_L X SU(2)_R
gauge symmetries, and F-theory SU(5) models. Interestingly, these vector-like
particles can be at the TeV-scale so that the lightest CP-even Higgs boson mass
can be lifted, or play the messenger fields in the Gauge Mediated Supersymmetry
Breaking (GMSB). Considering GMSB, ultraviolet insensitive Anomaly Mediated
Supersymmetry Breaking (AMSB), and the deflected AMSB, we study the general
gaugino mass relations and their indices, which are valid from the GUT scale to
the electroweak scale at one loop, in the SU(5) models, the flipped SU(5) X
U(1)_X models, and the Pati-Salam SU(4)_C X SU(2)_L X SU(2)_R models. In the
deflected AMSB, we also define the new indices for the gaugino mass relations,
and calculate them as well. Using these gaugino mass relations and their
indices, we may probe the messenger fields at intermediate scale in the GMSB
and deflected AMSB, determine the supersymmetry breaking mediation mechanisms,
and distinguish the four-dimensional GUTs, orbifold GUTs, and F-theory GUTs.Comment: RevTex4, 45 pages, 15 tables, version to appear in JHE
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