1,076 research outputs found

    The CP properties of the lightest Higgs boson with sbottom effects

    Get PDF
    In the framework of the recently proposed gluino-axion model, using the effective potential method and taking into account the top-stop as well as the bottom-sbottom effects, we discuss the CP--properties of the lightest Higgs boson, in particular its CP--odd composition, which can offer new opportunities at collider searches. It is found that although the CP-odd composition of the lightest Higgs increases slightly with the inclusion of the sbottom effects, it never exceeds %0.17 for all values of the renormalization scale Q ranging from top mass to TeV scaleComment: 24 pp, 12 eps fig

    Data Preservation at LEP

    Full text link
    The four LEP experiments ALEPH, DELPHI, L3 and OPAL successfully recorded e+e- collision data during the years 1989 to 2000. As part of the ordinary evolution in High Energy Physics, these experiments can not be repeated and their data is therefore unique. This article briefly reviews the data preservation efforts undertaken by the four experiments beyond the end of data taking. The current status of the preserved data and associated tools is summarised.Comment: 7 pages, contribution to proceedings of the "First Workshop on Data Preservation and Long Term Analysis in HEP

    e+e−→bbˉudˉΌ−ΜˉΌe^+e^- \to b \bar{b} u \bar{d} \mu^- \bar{\nu}_\mu with a ttˉt\bar{t} production

    Full text link
    The cross section of e+e−→bbˉudˉΌ−ΜˉΌe^+e^- \to b \bar{b} u \bar{d} \mu^- \bar{\nu}_\mu process with a complete set of tree diagrams, 232 diagrams in the unitary gauge, was calculated at the energy range of s\sqrt{s} = 340 - 500 GeV by using GRACE system. A main contribution to the cross section comes from ttˉt\bar{t} production, where tt and tˉ\bar{t} decay into budˉbu\bar{d} and bˉΌ−ΜˉΌ\bar{b} \mu^- \bar{\nu}_{\mu}, respectively. It was found that the interference between the diagrams with ttˉt\bar{t} production and those with single-tt through WW WW pair production amounts to 10% at the ttˉt \bar{t} threshold energy region. In the energy region above twice of the top quark mass, more than 95% of the cross section comes from the ttˉt\bar{t} diagrams.Comment: 17 pages, 8 PostScript figures, LateX; To appear in Phys. Lett.

    NLO corrections to differential cross sections for pseudo-scalar Higgs boson production

    Get PDF
    We have computed the full next-to-leading (NLO) QCD corrections to the differential distributions d2σ/(dpT dy)d^2\sigma/(dp_T~dy) for pseudo-scalar Higgs (A) production at large hadron colliders. This calculation has been carried out using the effective Lagrangian approach which is valid as long as the mass of the pseudo-scalar Higgs boson mAm_{\rm A} and its transverse momentum pTp_T do not exceed the top-quark mass mtm_t. The shape of the distributions hardly differ from those obtained for scalar Higgs (H) production because, apart from the overall coupling constant and mass, there are only small differences between the partonic differential distributions for scalar and pseudo-scalar production. Therefore there are only differences in the magnitudes of the hadronic differential distributions which can be mainly attributed to the unknown mixing angle ÎČ\beta describing the pseudo-scalar Higgs coupling to the top quarks.Comment: 9 pages, LaTeX, 3 Postscript figures In the previous version we have forgotten to include contributions which arrise from interferences between graphs containing vertices corresponding to the operator O2(x)O_2(x) in Eq. (3) with graphs originating from the operator O1(x)O_1(x). These interferences occur because of the prescription for the Levi-Civita tensor given in our paper. These extra contributions are added to Eqs. (19) and (20). Numerically they are completely negligible so that the figures are not altere

    First results of the SOAP project. Open access publishing in 2010

    Full text link
    The SOAP (Study of Open Access Publishing) project has compiled data on the present offer for open access publishing in online peer-reviewed journals. Starting from the Directory of Open Access Journals, several sources of data are considered, including inspection of journal web site and direct inquiries within the publishing industry. Several results are derived and discussed, together with their correlations: the number of open access journals and articles; their subject area; the starting date of open access journals; the size and business models of open access publishers; the licensing models; the presence of an impact factor; the uptake of hybrid open access.Comment: Submitted to PLoS ON

    Highlights from the SOAP project survey. What Scientists Think about Open Access Publishing

    Full text link
    The SOAP (Study of Open Access Publishing) project has run a large-scale survey of the attitudes of researchers on, and the experiences with, open access publishing. Around forty thousands answers were collected across disciplines and around the world, showing an overwhelming support for the idea of open access, while highlighting funding and (perceived) quality as the main barriers to publishing in open access journals. This article serves as an introduction to the survey and presents this and other highlights from a preliminary analysis of the survey responses. To allow a maximal re-use of the information collected by this survey, the data are hereby released under a CC0 waiver, so to allow libraries, publishers, funding agencies and academics to further analyse risks and opportunities, drivers and barriers, in the transition to open access publishing.Comment: Data manual available at http://bit.ly/gI8nct Compressed CSV data file available at http://bit.ly/gSmm71 Alternative data formats: CSV http://bit.ly/ejuvKO XLS http://bit.ly/e6gE7o XLSX http://bit.ly/gTjyv

    Testing the Higgs Sector of the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model at Large Hadron Colliders

    Full text link
    We study the Higgs sector of the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model, in the context of proton-proton collisions at LHC and SSC energies. We assume a relatively heavy supersymmetric particle spectrum, and include recent results on one-loop radiative corrections to Higgs-boson masses and couplings. We begin by discussing present and future constraints from the LEP experiments. We then compute branching ratios and total widths for the neutral (h,H,Ah,H,A) and charged (H±H^\pm) Higgs particles. We present total cross-sections and event rates for the important discovery channels at the LHC and SSC. Promising physics signatures are given by h→γγh \to \gamma \gamma, H→γγH \to \gamma \gamma or Z∗Z∗Z^* Z^* or τ+τ−\tau^+ \tau^-, A→τ+τ−A \to \tau^+ \tau^-, and t→bH+t \to b H^+ followed by H+→τ+ΜτH^+ \to \tau^+ \nu_{\tau}, which should allow for an almost complete coverage of the parameter space of the model.Comment: 51 pages, 30 figures (not enclosed and not available via e-mail

    A gobal fit to the anomalous magnetic moment, b->s gamma and Higgs limits in the constrained MSSM

    Get PDF
    New data on the anomalous magnetic moment a_mu of the muon together with the b->s gamma decay rate are considered within the supergravity inspired constrained minimal supersymmetric model. We perform a global statistical chi^2 analysis of these data and show that the allowed region of parameter space is bounded from below by the Higgs limit, which depends on the trilinear coupling and from above by the anomalous magnetic moment a_mu. The newest b->s gamma data deviate 1.7 sigma from recent SM calculations and prefer a similar parameter region as the 2.6 sigma deviation from a_mu.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figs. Refs. update

    How Finely Tuned is Supersymmetric Dark Matter?

    Get PDF
    We introduce a quantification of the question in the title: the logarithmic sensitivity of the relic neutralino density Omega-hsquared to variations in input parameters such as the supersymmetric mass scales m_0, m_1/2 and A_0, tan beta and the top and bottom quark masses. In generic domains of the CMSSM parameter space with a relic density in the preferred range 0.1 < Omega-hsquared < 0.3, the sensitivities to all these parameters are moderate, so an interesting amount of supersymetric dark matter is a natural and robust prediction. Within these domains, the accuracy in measuring the CMSSM and other input parameters at the LHC may enable the relic density to be predicted quite precisely. However, in the coannihilation regions, this might require more information on the supersymetric spectrum than the LHC is able to provide. There are also exceptional domains, such as those where direct-channel pole annihilation dominates, and in the `focus-point' region, where the logarithmic sensitivity to the input parameters is greatly increased, and it would be more difficult to predict Omega-hsquared accurately.Comment: 14 pages, 2 eps figure

    The Stau Neutralino Co-annihilation Region at an International Linear Collider

    Get PDF
    We probe the stau-neutralino co-annihilation domain of the parameter space allowed by the current experimental bounds on the light Higgs mass, the b-> s \gamma decay, and the amount of neutralino cold dark matter within the framework of minimal SUGRA models at a 500 GeV e+e- linear collider. The most favorable signals of SUSY are stau pair production and neutralino pair production where the small mass difference between the lighter stau and the lightest neutralino in the co-annihilation region is ~5-15 GeV and hence generates low-energy tau leptons in the final state. This small mass difference would be a striking signal of many SUGRA models. We find that a calorimeter covering down to 1^o from the beams is crucial to reduce the two-photon background and the mass difference could be measured at a level of 10% with 500 fb^-1 of data where an invariant mass of two-tau jets and missing energy is used as a discriminator.Comment: 17 pages, 7 figure
    • 

    corecore