27 research outputs found
Collider and Dark Matter Searches in Models with Mixed Modulus-Anomaly Mediated SUSY Breaking
We investigate the phenomenology of supersymmetric models where moduli fields
and the Weyl anomaly make comparable contributions to SUSY breaking effects in
the observable sector of fields. This mixed modulus-anomaly mediated
supersymmetry breaking (MM-AMSB) scenario is inspired by models of string
compactification with fluxes, which have been shown to yield a de Sitter vacuum
(as in the recent construction by Kachru {\it et al}). The phenomenology
depends on the so-called modular weights which, in turn, depend on the location
of various fields in the extra dimensions. We find that the model with zero
modular weights gives mass spectra characterized by very light top squarks
and/or tau sleptons, or where M_1\sim -M_2 so that the bino and wino are
approximately degenerate. The top squark mass can be in the range required by
successful electroweak baryogenesis. The measured relic density of cold dark
matter can be obtained via top squark co-annihilation at low \tan\beta, tau
slepton co-annihilation at large \tan\beta or via bino-wino coannihilation.
Then, we typically find low rates for direct and indirect detection of
neutralino dark matter. However, essentially all the WMAP-allowed parameter
space can be probed by experiments at the CERN LHC, while significant portions
may also be explored at an e^+e^- collider with \sqrt{s}=0.5--1 TeV. We also
investigate a case with non-zero modular weights. In this case,
co-annihilation, A-funnel annihilation and bulk annihilation of neutralinos are
all allowed. Results for future colliders are qualitatively similar, but
prospects for indirect dark matter searches via gamma rays and anti-particles
are somewhat better.Comment: 38 pages including 22 EPS figures; latest version posted to conform
with published versio
Dirty black holes: Quasinormal modes
In this paper, we investigate the asymptotic nature of the quasinormal modes
for "dirty" black holes -- generic static and spherically symmetric spacetimes
for which a central black hole is surrounded by arbitrary "matter" fields. We
demonstrate that, to the leading asymptotic order, the [imaginary] spacing
between modes is precisely equal to the surface gravity, independent of the
specifics of the black hole system.
Our analytical method is based on locating the complex poles in the first
Born approximation for the scattering amplitude. We first verify that our
formalism agrees, asymptotically, with previous studies on the Schwarzschild
black hole. The analysis is then generalized to more exotic black hole
geometries. We also extend considerations to spacetimes with two horizons and
briefly discuss the degenerate-horizon scenario.Comment: 15 pages; uses iopart.cls setstack.sty; V2: one additional reference
added, no physics changes; V3: two extra references, minor changes in
response to referee comment
Using kinematic boundary lines for particle mass measurements and disambiguation in SUSY-like events with missing energy
We revisit the method of kinematical endpoints for particle mass
determination, applied to the popular SUSY decay chain squark -> neutralino ->
slepton -> LSP. We analyze the uniqueness of the solutions for the mass
spectrum in terms of the measured endpoints in the observable invariant mass
distributions. We provide simple analytical inversion formulas for the masses
in terms of the measured endpoints. We show that in a sizable portion of the
SUSY mass parameter space the solutions always suffer from a two-fold
ambiguity, due to the fact that the original relations between the masses and
the endpoints are piecewise-defined functions. The ambiguity persists even in
the ideal case of a perfect detector and infinite statistics. We delineate the
corresponding dangerous regions of parameter space and identify the sets of
"twin" mass spectra. In order to resolve the ambiguity, we propose a
generalization of the endpoint method, from single-variable distributions to
two-variable distributions. In particular, we study analytically the boundaries
of the (m_{jl(lo)}, m_{jl(hi)}) and (m_{ll}, m_{jll}) distributions and prove
that their shapes are in principle sufficient to resolve the ambiguity in the
mass determination. We identify several additional independent measurements
which can be obtained from the boundary lines of these bivariate distributions.
The purely kinematical nature of our method makes it generally applicable to
any model that exhibits a SUSY-like cascade decay.Comment: 47 pages, 19 figure
Prospects for e+e- physics at Frascati between the phi and the psi
We present a detailed study, done in the framework of the INFN 2006 Roadmap,
of the prospects for e+e- physics at the Frascati National Laboratories. The
physics case for an e+e- collider running at high luminosity at the phi
resonance energy and also reaching a maximum center of mass energy of 2.5 GeV
is discussed, together with the specific aspects of a very high luminosity
tau-charm factory. Subjects connected to Kaon decay physics are not discussed
here, being part of another INFN Roadmap working group. The significance of the
project and the impact on INFN are also discussed. All the documentation
related to the activities of the working group can be found in
http://www.roma1.infn.it/people/bini/roadmap.html.Comment: INFN Roadmap Report: 86 pages, 25 figures, 9 table