2,727 research outputs found
Spin 3/2 Particle as a Dark Matter Candidate: an Effective Field Theory Approach
There is no indication so far on the spin of dark matter particles. We
consider the possibility in this work that a spin-3/2 particle acts as dark
matter. Employing the approach of effective field theory, we list all possible
4-fermion effective interactions between a pair of such fields and a pair of
ordinary fermion fields. We investigate the implications of the proposal on the
relic density, the antiproton to proton flux ratio in cosmic rays, and the
elastic scattering off nuclei in direct detection. While the relic density and
flux ratio are sensitive to all interactions albeit at different levels, the
direct detection is only sensitive to a few of them. Using the observed data
and experimental bounds, we set constraints on the relation of couplings and
dark particle mass. In particular, we find that some mass ranges can already be
excluded by jointly applying the observed relic density on the one side and the
measured antiproton to proton flux ratio or the upper bounds from direct
detection on the other.Comment: v1: 18 pages including 6 figs; v2: 19 pages including 6 figs, added
more refs, fixed wrong labels (to experiments) in figs. 3 and 4, corrected
typos; v3: 19 pages, slight clarifications in response to referee's comments,
added more refs, identical to the proofread version for jhep except for the
format of ref
LHC Phenomenology of Type II Seesaw: Nondegenerate Case
In this paper, we thoroughly investigate the LHC phenomenology of the type II
seesaw mechanism for neutrino masses in the nondegenerate case where the
triplet scalars of various charge () have
different masses. Compared with the degenerate case, the cascade decays of
scalars lead to many new, interesting signal channels. In the positive scenario
where , the four-lepton signal is still
the most promising discovery channel for the doubly-charged scalars
. The five-lepton signal is crucial to probe the mass spectrum of
the scalars, for which, for example, a reach at 14 TeV LHC for
with requires an integrated
luminosity of 76/fb. And the six-lepton signal can be used to probe the neutral
scalars , which are usually hard to detect in the degenerate case. In
the negative scenario where , the
detection of is more challenging, when the cascade decay
is dominant. The most important channel is the
associated production in the final state
, which requires a luminosity of 109/fb
for a discovery, while the final state
is less promising. Moreover, the
associated production can give same signals as the standard model
Higgs pair production. With a much larger cross section, the
production in the final state could reach
significance at 14 TeV LHC with a luminosity of 300/fb. In summary, with an
integrated luminosity of order 500/fb, the triplet scalars can be fully
reconstructed at 14 TeV LHC in the negative scenario.Comment: 41 pages, 20 figures, 7 tables. Version 2 accepted by PRD. 41 pages,
18 figures. Main changes are, (1) rewording in secs III and IV, removing 2
figs and quoting ref [34]; (2) a paragraph added before eq (10) to clarify
constraints from electroweak precision data; (3) a paper added to ref [11].
No changes in result
LHC Phenomenology of the Type II Seesaw Mechanism: Observability of Neutral Scalars in the Nondegenerate Case
This is a sequel to our previous work on LHC phenomenology of the type II
seesaw model in the nondegenerate case. In this work, we further study the pair
and associated production of the neutral scalars H^0/A^0. We restrict ourselves
to the so-called negative scenario characterized by the mass order
M_{H^{\pm\pm}}>M_{H^\pm}>M_{H^0/A^0}, in which the H^0/A^0 production receives
significant enhancement from cascade decays of the charged scalars
H^{\pm\pm},~H^\pm. We consider three important signal
channels---b\bar{b}\gamma\gamma, b\bar{b}\tau^+\tau^-,
---and perform detailed simulations. We find
that at the 14 TeV LHC with an integrated luminosity of 3000/fb, a 5\sigma mass
reach of 151, 150, and 180 GeV, respectively, is possible in the three channels
from the pure Drell-Yan H^0A^0 production, while the cascade-decay-enhanced
H^0/A^0 production can push the mass limit further to 164, 177, and 200 GeV.
The neutral scalars in the negative scenario are thus accessible at LHC run II.Comment: v1: 32 pages, 17 figures, 3 tables. v2: added 2 refs (2nd in [61] and
[66]), revised Acknowledgments, and corrected grammatical errors according to
proofs; no other change
Joint modeling of bivariate time to event data with semi-competing risk
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI)Survival analysis often encounters the situations of correlated multiple events
including the same type of event observed from siblings or multiple events experienced
by the same individual. In this dissertation, we focus on the joint modeling of bivariate
time to event data with the estimation of the association parameters and also in the
situation of a semi-competing risk.
This dissertation contains three related topics on bivariate time to event mod
els. The first topic is on estimating the cross ratio which is an association parameter
between bivariate survival functions. One advantage of using cross-ratio as a depen
dence measure is that it has an attractive hazard ratio interpretation by comparing
two groups of interest. We compare the parametric, a two-stage semiparametric and
a nonparametric approaches in simulation studies to evaluate the estimation perfor
mance among the three estimation approaches.
The second part is on semiparametric models of univariate time to event with
a semi-competing risk. The third part is on semiparametric models of bivariate time
to event with semi-competing risks. A frailty-based model framework was used to
accommodate potential correlations among the multiple event times. We propose
two estimation approaches. The first approach is a two stage semiparametric method
where cumulative baseline hazards were estimated by nonparametric methods first
and used in the likelihood function. The second approach is a penalized partial
likelihood approach. Simulation studies were conducted to compare the estimation
accuracy between the proposed approaches. Data from an elderly cohort were used
to examine factors associated with times to multiple diseases and considering death
as a semi-competing risk
Interpretation of 750 GeV Diphoton Excess at LHC in Singlet Extension of Color-octet Neutrino Mass Model
We propose that the possible 750 GeV diphoton excess can be explained in the
color-octet neutrino mass model extended with a scalar singlet . The
model generally contains species of color-octet, electroweak doublet
scalars and species of color-octet, electroweak triplet or
singlet fermions. While both scalars and fermions contribute to the
production of through gluon fusion, only the charged members induce the
diphoton decay of . The diphoton rate can be significantly enhanced due
to interference between the scalar and fermion loops. We show that the diphoton
cross section can be from 3 to 10 fb for O(TeV) color-octet particles while
evading all current LHC limits.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures; v2: 13 pages, 4 figures, version to appear in
EPJC, clarified a few things, updated numerical analysis using the most
recent bound on color-octet fermions but without changing conclusions,
corrected a mistake when quoting the branching ratio to Z gamma, added some
references missed in v
Radiative Neutrino Mass with Dark matter: From Relic Density to LHC Signatures
In this work we give a comprehensive analysis on the phenomenology of a
specific dark matter (DM) model in which neutrino mass is
induced at two loops by interactions with a DM particle that can be a complex
scalar or a Dirac fermion. Both the DM properties in relic density and direct
detection and the LHC signatures are examined in great detail, and indirect
detection for gamma-ray excess from the Galactic Center is also discussed
briefly. On the DM side, both semi-annihilation and co-annihilation processes
play a crucial role in alleviating the tension of parameter space between relic
density and direct detection. On the collider side, new decay channels
resulting from particles lead to distinct signals at LHC.
Currently the trilepton signal is expected to give the most stringent bound for
both scalar and fermion DM candidates, and the signatures of fermion DM are
very similar to those of electroweakinos in simplified supersymmetric models.Comment: 40 pages, 24 figure
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