1,231 research outputs found
Distinguishing charged Higgs bosons from different representations at the LHC
Extending the Standard Model (SM) scalar sector via one or multiple Higgs
field(s) in higher representation brings one or more charged Higgs bosons in
the spectrum. Some of these gauge representations with appropriate hypercharge
can bring up doubly charged Higgs boson and can be easily distinguished from
the existing models with only singly charged Higgs boson. In this study we
focus on distinguishing the singly charged Higgs bosons from different
representations, viz. doublets and triplets of gauge group. We
consider a supersymmetric extension of SM with a gauge singlet and
triplet with as a benchmark scenario with the possibility of rich
phenomenology due to existence of light pseudoscalar for symmetric
superpotential. A detailed collider simulation considering all the SM
backgrounds has been carried out in order to classify the final states which
are favourable to charged Higgs boson from one particular representation than
others. We show that such different representations can be probed an
distinguished via looking at single charged Higgs boson phenomenology at the
LHC with 14 TeV center of mass energy within fb of integrated
luminosity.Comment: 28 pages, 14 figures, 14 tables. updated version with references
reordere
Extra Quarks and Bileptons in BSM Physics in a Model
We describe some salient features of the (Frampton-Pisano-Pleitez)
bilepton model, in which the constraints of anomaly cancelation require the
number of generations to be three. In a class of six models, four of which
characterised by a parameter describing the embedding of the
hypercharge in the symmetry, a specific choice for allows
bileptons in the spectrum, i.e. vectors and scalars of lepton numbers .
At the same time the model allows exotic quarks, with the third quark
generation treated asymmetrically respect to the other two. Bileptons generate
specific signatures in the form of multilepton final states in Drell-Yan like
processes, with and without associated jets, which can be searched for at the
LHC.Comment: 7 pages, 2 Figures. Proceedings of the Workshop QCD@work 2018, 25-28
June 2018, Matera, Ital
Perspectives on a Supersymmetric Extension of the Standard Model with a Higgs Triplet and a Singlet at the LHC
We investigate a supersymmetric extension of the Minimal Supersymmetric
Standard Model (MSSM), called the TNMSSM, containing a Higgs triplet
of hypercharge and a singlet superfields in the
corresponding superpotential. The model can be viewed, equivalently, as an
extension of the NMSSM with the addition of a interaction and
of an extra coupling of the triplet to the two Higgs doublets of the NMSSM. In
this scenario the Higgs particle spectrum at tree-level gets additional mass
contributions from the triplet and singlet scalar components respect to the
MSSM, which are particularly enhanced at low . We calculate the
one-loop Higgs masses for the neutral physical Higgs bosons by a
Coleman-Weinberg effective potential approach. In particular, we investigate
separately the impact of the radiative corrections due to the electroweak,
gauge-gaugino-higgsino, fermion-sfermion and Higgs self-interactions to the
Higgs masses. Due to the larger number of scalars and of triplet and singlet
couplings, the Higgs corrections can be larger than the strong corrections.
This reduces the amount of fine-tuning required to fit the recent Higgs data.
Using the expressions of the beta-functions of the model, we show that the
large triplet singlet coupling remains perturbative up to GeV.
The model is also characterized by a light pseudoscalar in the spectrum, which
is a linear combination of the triplet, doublet and singlet CP-odd components.
We discuss the production and decay signatures of the Higgs bosons in this
model, including scenarios with hidden Higgses, which could be investigated at
the LHC in the current run.Comment: 39 pages, 37 figures, comments added for the published versio
Higgs bosons: discovered and hidden, in extended Supersymmetric Standard Models at the LHC
We investigate an extension of the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model
(MSSM) containing a Higgs triplet of zero hypercharge and a gauge
singlet. We focus on a scenario of this model which allows a light pseudoscalar
and/or a scalar below GeV in the spectrum, consistent with the most
recent data from the LHC and the earlier data from the LEP experiments. We
analyze the exotic decay of the discovered Higgs into two light
(hidden) Higgs bosons present in the extension. The latter are allowed by the
uncertainties in the Higgs decay , and
. We have searched for such light Higgs bosons in the
, , and final states at the LHC
with 13 and 14 TeV. A region of such parameter space can be explored with an
integrated luminosity of 25 fb at the LHC.Comment: 12 pages, 10 figures, CORFUR2015. arXiv admin note: text overlap with
arXiv:1506.0363
Sum rules and spectral density flow in QCD and in superconformal theories
We discuss the signature of the anomalous breaking of the superconformal
symmetry in super Yang Mills theory and its manifestation in
the form of anomaly poles. Moreover, we describe the massive deformations of
the theory and the spectral densities of the corresponding
anomaly form factors. These are characterized by spectral densities which flow
with the mass deformation and turn the continuum contributions from the
two-particle cuts of the intermediate states into poles, with a single sum rule
satisfied by each component. The poles can be interpreted as signaling the
exchange of a composite axion/dilaton/dilatino (ADD) multiplet in the effective
Lagrangian. We conclude that global anomalous currents characterized by a
single flow in the perturbative picture always predict the existence of
composite interpolating fields.Comment: 8 pages. arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with
arXiv:1402.636
Peer review for the evaluation of the academic research: the Italian experience
Peer review, that is the evaluation process based on judgments formulated by independent experts, is generally used for different goals: the allocation of research funding, the review of the research results submitted for publication in scientific journals, and the assessment of the quality of research conducted by Universities and university-related Institutes. The paper deals with the latter type of peer review. The aim is to understand how the characteristics of the Italian experience provide useful lessons for improving peer review effectiveness for evaluating the academic research. More specifically, the paper investigates the peer review process developed within the Three-Year Research Assessment Exercise (VTR) in Italy. Our analysis covers four disciplinary sectors: chemistry, biology, humanities and economics. Thus, the choice includes two “hard science” sectors, which have similar type of research output submitted for the three-year evaluation process, and two sectors with different types of output. The results provide evidences, which highlight the important role played by peer review for judging the quality of the academic research in different fields of science, and for comparing different institutions’ performance. Moreover, some basic features of the evaluation process are discussed, in order to understand their usefulness for reinforcing the effectiveness of the peers’ final outcome.Scientific research, Evaluation, Peer review, University, Academic institutions
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