44 research outputs found
Large Extra Dimension effects through Light-by-Light Scattering at the CERN LHC
Observing light-by-light scattering at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) has
received quite some attention and it is believed to be a clean and sensitive
channel to possible new physics. In this paper, we study the diphoton
production at the LHC via the process through graviton exchange in the Large Extra
Dimension (LED) model. Typically, when we do the background analysis, we also
study the Double Pomeron Exchange (DPE) of production. We
compare its production in the quark-quark collision mode to the gluon-gluon
collision mode and find that contributions from the gluon-gluon collision mode
are comparable to the quark-quark one. Our result shows, for extra dimension
, with an integrated luminosity at the
14 TeV LHC, that diphoton production through graviton exchange can probe the
LED effects up to the scale for the forward
detector acceptance , respectively, where
, and .Comment: 25 pages. 7 figs. Change some grammatical error
LHC Predictions from a Tevatron Anomaly in the Top Quark Forward-Backward Asymmetry
We examine the implications of the recent CDF measurement of the top-quark
forward-backward asymmetry, focusing on a scenario with a new color octet
vector boson at 1-3 TeV. We study several models, as well as a general
effective field theory, and determine the parameter space which provides the
best simultaneous fit to the CDF asymmetry, the Tevatron top pair production
cross section, and the exclusion regions from LHC dijet resonance and contact
interaction searches. Flavor constraints on these models are more subtle and
less severe than the literature indicates. We find a large region of allowed
parameter space at high axigluon mass and a smaller region at low mass; we
match the latter to an SU(3)xSU(3)/SU(3) coset model with a heavy vector-like
fermion. Our scenario produces discoverable effects at the LHC with only 1-2
inverse femtobarns of luminosity at 7-8 TeV. Lastly, we point out that a
Tevatron measurement of the b-quark forward-backward asymmetry would be very
helpful in characterizing the physics underlying the top-quark asymmetry.Comment: 35 pages, 10 figures, 4 table
Minimal Flavour Violation for Leptoquarks
Scalar leptoquarks, with baryon and lepton number conserving interactions,
could have TeV scale masses, and be produced at colliders or contribute to a
wide variety of rare decays. In pursuit of some insight as to the most
sensitive search channels, We assume that the leptoquark-lepton-quark coupling
can be constructed from the known mass matrices. We estimate the rates for
selected rare processes in three cases: leptoquarks carrying lepton and quark
flavour, leptoquarks with quark flavour only, and unflavoured leptoquarks. We
find that leptoquark decay to top quarks is an interesting search channel.Comment: 17 pages, 2 figures, minor changes and references adde
Supersymmetric Decays of the Z' Boson
The decay of the Z' boson into supersymmetric particles is studied. We
investigate how these supersymmetric modes affect the current limits from the
Tevatron and project the expected sensitivities at the LHC. Employing three
representative supersymmetric Z' models, namely, E_6, U(1)_{B-L}, and the
sequential model, we show that the current limits of the Z' mass from the
Tevatron could be reduced substantially due to the weakening of the branching
ratio into leptonic pairs. The mass reach for the E_6 Z' bosons is about
1.3-1.5 TeV at the LHC-7 (1 fb^{-1}), about 2.5 - 2.6 TeV at the LHC-10 (10
fb^{-1}), and about 4.2 - 4.3 TeV at the LHC-14 (100 fb^{-1}). A similar mass
reach for the U(1)_{B-L} Z' is also obtained. We also examine the potential of
identifying various supersymmetric decay modes of the Z' boson because it may
play a crucial role in the detailed dynamics of supersymmetry breaking.Comment: 30 pages, including 13 figures. improvements to the presentation and
references adde
Charge asymmetries of top quarks at hadron colliders revisited
A sizeable difference in the differential production cross section of top-
compared to antitop-quark production, denoted charge asymmetry, has been
observed at the Tevatron. The experimental results seem to exceed the theory
predictions based on the Standard Model by a significant amount and have
triggered a large number of suggestions for "new physics". In the present paper
the Standard Model predictions for Tevatron and LHC experiments are revisited.
This includes a reanalysis of electromagnetic as well as weak corrections,
leading to a shift of the asymmetry by roughly a factor 1.1 when compared to
the results of the first papers on this subject. The impact of cuts on the
transverse momentum of the top-antitop system is studied. Restricting the ttbar
system to a transverse momentum less than 20 GeV leads to an enhancement of the
asymmetries by factors between 1.3 and 1.5, indicating the importance of an
improved understanding of the -momentum distribution. Predictions for
similar measurements at the LHC are presented, demonstrating the sensitivity of
the large rapidity region both to the Standard Model contribution and effects
from "new physics".Comment: 23 pages. Final version to appear in JHE
Z' signals in polarised top-antitop final states
We study the sensitivity of top-antitop samples produced at all energy stages
of the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) to the nature of an underlying Z' boson, in
presence of full tree level standard model (SM) background effects and relative
interferences. We concentrate on differential mass spectra as well as both
spatial and spin asymmetries thereby demonstrating that exploiting combinations
of these observables will enable one to distinguish between sequential Z's and
those pertaining to Left-Right symmetric models as well as E6 inspired ones,
assuming realistic final state reconstruction efficiencies and error estimates.Comment: 21 pages, 6 colour figures, 10 table
Colored Resonant Signals at the LHC: Largest Rate and Simplest Topology
We study the colored resonance production at the LHC in a most general
approach. We classify the possible colored resonances based on group theory
decomposition, and construct their effective interactions with light partons.
The production cross section from annihilation of valence quarks or gluons may
be on the order of 400 - 1000 pb at LHC energies for a mass of 1 TeV with
nominal couplings, leading to the largest production rates for new physics at
the TeV scale, and simplest event topology with dijet final states. We apply
the new dijet data from the LHC experiments to put bounds on various possible
colored resonant states. The current bounds range from 0.9 to 2.7 TeV. The
formulation is readily applicable for future searches including other decay
modes.Comment: 29 pages, 9 figures. References updated and additional K-factors
include
Improving the Top Quark Forward-Backward Asymmetry Measurement at the LHC
At the LHC, top quark pairs are dominantly produced from gluons, making it
difficult to measure the top quark forward-backward asymmetry. To improve the
asymmetry measurement, we study variables that can distinguish between top
quarks produced from quarks and those from gluons: the invariant mass of the
top pair, the rapidity of the top-antitop system in the lab frame, the rapidity
of the top quark in the top-antitop rest frame, the top quark polarization and
the top-antitop spin correlation. We combine all the variables in a likelihood
discriminant method to separate quark-initiated events from gluon-initiated
events. We apply our method on models including G-prime's and W-prime's
motivated by the recent observation of a large top quark forward-backward
asymmetry at the Tevatron. We have found that the significance of the asymmetry
measurement can be improved by 10% to 30%. At the same time, the central values
of the asymmetry increase by 40% to 100%. We have also analytically derived the
best spin quantization axes for studying top quark polarization as well as
spin-correlation for the new physics models.Comment: 26 pages, 11 figure