9,297 research outputs found
Symmetry breaking and electroweak physics at Photon Linear Colliders
The physics potential of a high-energy photon collider is reviewed. The
emphasis is put on aspects related to the symmetry breaking sector, including
Higgs searches and production of longitudinal vector bosons.Comment: LATEX, 12 pages, 3 fig, macros included, no changes in pape
Dark matter and the LHC
Cosmological and astrophysical measurements indicate that the universe
contains a large amount of dark matter. A number of weak scale dark matter
candidates have been proposed in extensions of the standard model. The
potential to discover the dark matter particle and determine its properties at
the upcoming LHC is summarized.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, Talk at Dark matter and dark energy, GGI,
Florence, Italy, March 200
{\Large{\bf Higgs or Neutral Vector Boson Production with a Pair in {\LARGE } Collisions}}
Exploiting the fact that pair production in high-energy
collisions is very large, we use this process to trigger Higgs, or photon
radiation. We find that there are sizeable rising cross-sections for triple
bosons production. At energies about the new mechanism for Higgs
production becomes very competitive with the dominant Higgs production
processes in and reactions. The effect of different
polarized photon spectra obtained through back-scattered laser light on the
electron beam of a linear collider is investigated . We give a special
attention to the search of the intermediate mass Higgs in production and
discuss how to effectively suppress the backgrounds.Comment: ENSLAPP-A-430/93, 14 pages, plus 6 figures available through mail or
fax upon reques
A Dark Sector for , and a Diphoton Resonance
We revisit a set of dark sector models, motivated by anomalies observed in
decays and the muon anomalous magnetic moment, in the light of a recently
reported diphoton excess around 750GeV. Interpreting the excess as a scalar
resonance associated with the symmetry breaking sector of a dark gauge group,
we show that a diphoton cross section of few fb can be accomodated, together
with anomalies in and within a minimal dark sector model. The
resulting prominent collider signatures are in the form of wide resonant
signals into top and muon pair final states below TeV. The model
further predicts a dark matter candidate, yet with a significantly
underabundant relic density, unless produced by an appropriate non-thermal
mechanism.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figure
Assisted freeze-out
We explore a class of dark matter models with two dark matter candidates,
only one interacts with the standard model sector. One of the dark matter is
thermalized with the assistance of the other stable particle. While both stable
particles contribute to the total relic density only one can elastically
scatter with nuclei, thus effectively reducing the direct detection rate.Comment: 16 pages, 13 figures, minor corrections, the final version published
in JCA
Compressed absorbing boundary conditions via matrix probing
Absorbing layers are sometimes required to be impractically thick in order to
offer an accurate approximation of an absorbing boundary condition for the
Helmholtz equation in a heterogeneous medium. It is always possible to reduce
an absorbing layer to an operator at the boundary by layer-stripping
elimination of the exterior unknowns, but the linear algebra involved is
costly. We propose to bypass the elimination procedure, and directly fit the
surface-to-surface operator in compressed form from a few exterior Helmholtz
solves with random Dirichlet data. The result is a concise description of the
absorbing boundary condition, with a complexity that grows slowly (often,
logarithmically) in the frequency parameter.Comment: 29 pages with 25 figure
A Dark Matter Relic From Muon Anomalies
We show that the recently reported anomalies in
transitions, as well as the long-standing discrepancy, can be
addressed simultaneously by a new massive abelian gauge boson with loop-induced
coupling to muons. Such a scenario typically leads to a stable dark matter
candidate with a thermal relic density close to the observed value. Dark matter
in our model couples dominantly to leptons, hence signals in direct detection
experiments lie well below the current sensitivity. The LHC, in combination
with indirect detection searches, can test this scenario through distinctive
signatures with muon pairs and missing energy.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures, 1 tabl
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