48 research outputs found
Refining light stop exclusion limits with cross sections
If light supersymmetric top (stop) quarks are produced at the LHC and decay
via on- or off-shell -bosons they can be expected to contribute to a
precision cross section measurement. Using the latest results of the
CMS experiment, we revisit constraints on the stop quark production and find
that this measurement can exclude portions of the parameter space not probed by
dedicated searches. In particular we can exclude light top squarks up to
230~GeV along the line separating three- and four-body decays, . We also study the exclusion limits in the case
when the branching ratio for these decays is reduced and we show significant
improvement over previously existing limits.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures; references updated, minor changes; to appear in
Phys. Lett.
CP-violation in cascade decays at the LHC
We study the potential to observe CP-violating effects in various supersymmetric cascade
decay chains at the LHC. Asymmetries composed by triple products of
momenta of the final state particles are sensitive to CP-violating
effects. We analytically calculate the cascade decays including the relevant spin correlations to compute the parton level asymmetry. In addition, we use Monte Carlo simulations to estimate the sensitivity of the LHC to the CP-violating observables.
Due to large boosts that dilute the asymmetries, these can be
difficult to observe at the LHC. However, if all particle masses in a cascade decay are
known, it may be possible to reconstruct all momenta in the decay chains. We can then recover the full asymmetry on an
event-by-event basis even when we have missing momentum due to a stable
lightest supersymmetric particle. After the reconstruction, the non-diluted CP-violating signal gets
significantly enhanced so that an observation may become feasible.
A fully hadronic study has also been completed to produce the best estimate of the viability of these obseravbles at the LHC. We include both standard model and SUSY backgrounds in the study. Our conclusions state that given a favourable scenario, CP-violation may be observed in SUSY at the 3-sigma level over a wide range of CP-phases with 500 1/fb of data
Contact Interactions Probe Effective Dark Matter Models at the LHC
Effective field theories provide a simple framework for probing possible dark
matter (DM) models by reparametrising full interactions into a reduced number
of operators with smaller dimensionality in parameter space. In many cases
these models have four particle vertices, e.g. qqXX, leading to the pair
production of dark matter particles, X, at a hadron collider from initial state
quarks, q. In this analysis we show that for many fundamental DM models with
s-channel DM couplings to qq-pairs, these effective vertices must also produce
quark contact interactions (CI) of the form qqqq. The respective effective
couplings are related by the common underlying theory which allows one to
translate the upper limits from one coupling to the other. We show that at the
LHC, the experimental limits on quark contact interactions give stronger
translated limits on the DM coupling than the experimental searches for dark
matter pair production.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure
Illuminating Dark Matter at the ILC
The WIMP (weakly interacting massive particle) paradigm for dark matter is
currently being probed via many different experiments. Direct detection,
indirect detection and collider searches are all hoping to catch a glimpse of
these elusive particles. Here, we examine the potential of the ILC
(International Linear Collider) to shed light on the origin of dark matter. By
using an effective field theory approach we are also able to compare the reach
of the ILC with that of the other searches. We find that for low mass dark
matter (< 10 GeV), the ILC offers a unique opportunity to search for WIMPS
beyond any other experiment. In addition, if dark matter happens to only couple
to leptons or via a spin dependent interaction, the ILC can give an unrivalled
window to these models. We improve on previous ILC studies by constructing a
comprehensive list of effective theories that allows us to move beyond the
non-relativistic approximation.Comment: 26 page
Symmetry Restored in Dibosons at the LHC?
A number of LHC resonance search channels display an excess in the invariant
mass region of 1.8 - 2.0 TeV. Among them is a excess in the fully
hadronic decay of a pair of Standard Model electroweak gauge bosons, in
addition to potential signals in the and dijet final states. We perform a
model-independent cross-section fit to the results of all ATLAS and CMS
searches sensitive to these final states. We then interpret these results in
the context of the Left-Right Symmetric Model, based on the extended gauge
group , and show that a heavy right-handed
gauge boson can naturally explain the current measurements with just a
single coupling . In addition, we discuss a possible connection
to dark matter.Comment: 25 pages, 12 figures, V2: references added, extended discussion of
Minimal Left-Right Dark Matter, small correction to decay width - conclusions
unchanged, V3: expanded discussion of input parameters and statistical
procedure, V4: matches published versio
Prospects for natural SUSY
As we anticipate the first results of the 2016 run, we assess the discovery
potential of the LHC to `natural supersymmetry'. To begin with, we explore the
region of the model parameter space that can be excluded with various
centre-of-mass energies (13 TeV and 14 TeV) and different luminosities (20
fb, 100 fb, 300 fb and 3000 fb). We find that the
bounds at 95% CL on stops vary from GeV expected
this summer to GeV at the end of the high
luminosity run, while gluino bounds are expected to range from
GeV to GeV over the
same time period. However, more pessimistically we find that if no signal
begins to appear this summer, only a very small region of parameter space can
be discovered with 5- significance. For this conclusion to change, we
find that both theoretical and systematic uncertainties will need to be
significantly reduced.Comment: 19 pages, 13 figures, minor changes, Phys.Rev.D versio
CheckMATE 2: From the model to the limit
We present the latest developments to the CheckMATE program that allows
models of new physics to be easily tested against the recent LHC data. To
achieve this goal, the core of CheckMATE now contains over 60 LHC analyses of
which 12 are from the 13 TeV run. The main new feature is that CheckMATE 2 now
integrates the Monte Carlo event generation via Madgraph and Pythia 8. This
allows users to go directly from a SLHA file or UFO model to the result of
whether a model is allowed or not. In addition, the integration of the event
generation leads to a significant increase in the speed of the program. Many
other improvements have also been made, including the possibility to now
combine signal regions to give a total likelihood for a model.Comment: 53 pages, 6 figures; references updated, instructions slightly
change