21 research outputs found
Bounds on Dark Matter Interactions with Electroweak Gauge Bosons
We investigate scenarios in which dark matter interacts with the Standard
Model primarily through electroweak gauge bosons. We employ an effective field
theory framework wherein the Standard Model and the dark matter particle are
the only light states in order to derive model-independent bounds. Bounds on
such interactions are derived from dark matter production by weak boson fusion
at the LHC, indirect detection searches for the products of dark matter
annihilation and from the measured invisible width of the . We find that
limits on the UV scale, , reach weak scale values for most operators
and values of the dark matter mass, thus probing the most natural scenarios in
the WIMP dark matter paradigm. Our bounds suggest that light dark matter
(m_{\chi}\lsim m_Z/2 or m_{\chi}\lsim 100-200\gev, depending on the
operator) cannot interact only with the electroweak gauge bosons of the
Standard Model, but rather requires additional operator contributions or dark
sector structure to avoid overclosing the universe.Comment: 45 pages, 26 figure
Higgs Properties in the Fourth Generation MSSM: Boosted Signals Over the 3G Plan
The generalization of the MSSM to the case of four chiral fermion generations
(4GMSSM) can lead to significant changes in the phenomenology of the otherwise
familiar Higgs sector. In most of the 3GMSSM parameter space, the lighter
CP-even is GeV and mostly Standard Model-like while
are all relatively heavy. Furthermore, the ratio of Higgs vevs,
, is relatively unconstrained. In contrast to this, in the 4GMSSM,
heavy fourth generation fermion loops drive the masses of to large
values while the CP-odd boson, , can remain relatively light and is restricted to the range 1/2 \lsim \tan \beta \lsim 2 due to
perturbativity requirements on Yukawa couplings. We explore this scenario in
some detail, concentrating on the collider signatures of the light CP-odd Higgs
at both the Tevatron and LHC. We find that while may lead to a
potential signal in the channel at the LHC, may first be
observed in the channel due to a highly loop-enhanced cross
section that can be more than an order of magnitude greater than that of a SM
Higgs for masses of and . We find that the
CP-even states are highly mixed and can have atypical branching
fractions. Precision electroweak constraints, particularly for the light
parameter space region, are examined in detail.Comment: 20 pages, 7 figures; typos fixed, refs adde
No Prejudice in Space
We present a summary of recent results obtained from a scan of the
19-dimensional parameter space of the pMSSM and its implications for dark
matter searches.Comment: 12 pgs, Presented at the Dark Matter Conference, 9-11 Feb 2009,
Arcetri, Florence, Ital
Constraints on the pMSSM from LAT Observations of Dwarf Spheroidal Galaxies
We examine the ability for the Large Area Telescope (LAT) to constrain
Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model (MSSM) dark matter through a combined
analysis of Milky Way dwarf spheroidal galaxies. We examine the Lightest
Supersymmetric Particles (LSPs) for a set of ~71k experimentally valid
supersymmetric models derived from the phenomenological-MSSM (pMSSM). We find
that none of these models can be excluded at 95% confidence by the current
analysis; nevertheless, many lie within the predicted reach of future LAT
analyses. With two years of data, we find that the LAT is currently most
sensitive to light LSPs (m_LSP < 50 GeV) annihilating into tau-pairs and
heavier LSPs annihilating into b-bbar. Additionally, we find that future LAT
analyses will be able to probe some LSPs that form a sub-dominant component of
dark matter. We directly compare the LAT results to direct detection
experiments and show the complementarity of these search methods.Comment: 24 pages, 9 figures, submitted to JCA
Determining Ratios of WIMP-Nucleon Cross Sections from Direct Dark Matter Detection Data
Weakly Interacting Massive Particles (WIMPs) are one of the leading
candidates for Dark Matter. So far the usual procedure for constraining the
WIMP-nucleon cross sections in direct Dark Matter detection experiments have
been to fit the predicted event rate based on some model(s) of the Galactic
halo and of WIMPs to experimental data. One has to assume whether the
spin-independent (SI) or the spin-dependent (SD) WIMP-nucleus interaction
dominates, and results of such data analyses are also expressed as functions of
the as yet unknown WIMP mass. In this article, I introduce methods for
extracting information on the WIMP-nucleon cross sections by considering a
general combination of the SI and SD interactions. Neither prior knowledge
about the local density and the velocity distribution of halo WIMPs nor about
their mass is needed. Assuming that an exponential-like shape of the recoil
spectrum is confirmed from experimental data, the required information are only
the measured recoil energies (in low energy ranges) and the number of events in
the first energy bin from two or more experiments.Comment: 33 pages, 20 eps figures; v2: typos fixed, references added and
updated, revised version for publicatio
Heart of Darkness: The Significance of the Zeptobarn Scale for Neutralino Direct Detection
The direct detection of dark matter through its elastic scattering off
nucleons is among the most promising methods for establishing the particle
identity of dark matter. The current bound on the spin-independent scattering
cross section is sigma^SI < 10 zb for dark matter masses m_chi ~ 100 GeV, with
improved sensitivities expected soon. We examine the implications of this
progress for neutralino dark matter. We work in a supersymmetric framework
well-suited to dark matter studies that is simple and transparent, with models
defined in terms of four weak-scale parameters. We first show that robust
constraints on electric dipole moments motivate large sfermion masses mtilde >
1 TeV, effectively decoupling squarks and sleptons from neutralino dark matter
phenomenology. In this case, we find characteristic cross sections in the
narrow range 1 zb 70 GeV. As sfermion masses are
lowered to near their experimental limit mtilde ~ 400 GeV, the upper and lower
limits of this range are extended, but only by factors of around two, and the
lower limit is not significantly altered by relaxing many particle physics
assumptions, varying the strange quark content of the nucleon, including the
effects of galactic small-scale structure, or assuming other components of dark
matter. Experiments are therefore rapidly entering the heart of dark
matter-favored supersymmetry parameter space. If no signal is seen,
supersymmetric models must contain some level of fine-tuning, and we identify
and analyze several possibilities. Barring large cancellations, however, in a
large and generic class of models, if thermal relic neutralinos are a
significant component of dark matter, experiments will discover them as they
probe down to the zeptobarn scale.Comment: 35 pages, 11 figures; v2: references added, figures extended to 2 TeV
neutralino masses, XENON100 results included, published versio
Supersymmetry Without Prejudice at the LHC
The discovery and exploration of Supersymmetry in a model-independent fashion
will be a daunting task due to the large number of soft-breaking parameters in
the MSSM. In this paper, we explore the capability of the ATLAS detector at the
LHC ( TeV, 1 fb) to find SUSY within the 19-dimensional
pMSSM subspace of the MSSM using their standard transverse missing energy and
long-lived particle searches that were essentially designed for mSUGRA. To this
end, we employ a set of k previously generated model points in the
19-dimensional parameter space that satisfy all of the existing experimental
and theoretical constraints. Employing ATLAS-generated SM backgrounds and
following their approach in each of 11 missing energy analyses as closely as
possible, we explore all of these k model points for a possible SUSY
signal. To test our analysis procedure, we first verify that we faithfully
reproduce the published ATLAS results for the signal distributions for their
benchmark mSUGRA model points. We then show that, requiring all sparticle
masses to lie below 1(3) TeV, almost all(two-thirds) of the pMSSM model points
are discovered with a significance in at least one of these 11 analyses
assuming a 50\% systematic error on the SM background. If this systematic error
can be reduced to only 20\% then this parameter space coverage is increased.
These results are indicative that the ATLAS SUSY search strategy is robust
under a broad class of Supersymmetric models. We then explore in detail the
properties of the kinematically accessible model points which remain
unobservable by these search analyses in order to ascertain problematic cases
which may arise in general SUSY searches.Comment: 69 pages, 40 figures, Discussion adde
Direct Constraints on Minimal Supersymmetry from Fermi-LAT Observations of the Dwarf Galaxy Segue 1
The dwarf galaxy Segue 1 is one of the most promising targets for the
indirect detection of dark matter. Here we examine what constraints 9 months of
Fermi-LAT gamma-ray observations of Segue 1 place upon the Constrained Minimal
Supersymmetric Standard Model (CMSSM), with the lightest neutralino as the dark
matter particle. We use nested sampling to explore the CMSSM parameter space,
simultaneously fitting other relevant constraints from accelerator bounds, the
relic density, electroweak precision observables, the anomalous magnetic moment
of the muon and B-physics. We include spectral and spatial fits to the Fermi
observations, a full treatment of the instrumental response and its related
uncertainty, and detailed background models. We also perform an extrapolation
to 5 years of observations, assuming no signal is observed from Segue 1 in that
time. Results marginally disfavour models with low neutralino masses and high
annihilation cross-sections. Virtually all of these models are however already
disfavoured by existing experimental or relic density constraints.Comment: 22 pages, 5 figures; added extra scans with extreme halo parameters,
expanded introduction and discussion in response to referee's comment
Search for dark matter signals with Fermi-LAT observation of globular clusters NGC 6388 and M 15
The globular clusters are probably good targets for dark matter (DM) searches
in -rays due to the possible adiabatic contraction of DM by baryons. In
this work we analyse the three-year data collected by {\it Fermi} Large Area
Telescope of globular clusters NGC 6388 and M 15 to search for possible DM
signals. For NGC 6388 the detection of -ray emission was reported by
{\it Fermi} collaboration, which is consistent with the emission of a
population of millisecond pulsars. The spectral shape of NGC 6388 is also shown
to be consistent with a DM contribution if assuming the annihilation final
state is . No significant -ray emission from M 15 is
observed. We give the upper limits of DM contribution to -ray emission
in both NGC 6388 and M 15, for annihilation final states , ,
, and monochromatic line. The constraints are
stronger than that derived from observation of dwarf galaxies by {\it Fermi}.Comment: 17 pages, 6 figures, accepted by JCA
Search for dark matter produced in association with a hadronically decaying vector boson in pp collisions at sqrt (s) = 13 TeV with the ATLAS detector
A search is presented for dark matter produced in association with a hadronically decaying W or Z boson using 3.2 fb−1 of pp collisions at View the MathML sources=13 TeV recorded by the ATLAS detector at the Large Hadron Collider. Events with a hadronic jet compatible with a W or Z boson and with large missing transverse momentum are analysed. The data are consistent with the Standard Model predictions and are interpreted in terms of both an effective field theory and a simplified model containing dark matter