448 research outputs found
Testing SUSY
If SUSY provides a solution to the hierarchy problem then supersymmetric
states should not be too heavy. This requirement is quantified by a fine tuning
measure that provides a quantitative test of SUSY as a solution to the
hierarchy problem. The measure is useful in correlating the impact of the
various experimental measurements relevant to the search for supersymmetry and
also in identifying the most sensitive measurements for testing SUSY. In this
paper we apply the measure to the CMSSM, computing it to two-loop order and
taking account of current experimental limits and the constraint on dark matter
abundance. Using this we determine the present limits on the CMSSM parameter
space and identify the measurements at the LHC that are most significant in
covering the remaining parameter space. Without imposing the LEP Higgs mass
bound we show that the smallest fine tuning (1:13) consistent with a relic
density within the WMAP bound corresponds to a Higgs mass of 1142 GeV.
Fine tuning rises rapidly for heavier Higgs.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures; references added, figures updated for extended
parameter space sca
Naturalness and Focus Points with Non-Universal Gaugino Masses
Relations between the gaugino masses have been shown to alleviate the degree
of fine-tuning in the MSSM. In this paper we consider specific models of
supersymmetry breaking with gravity mediation and demonstrate that within both
GUT and string constructions it is possible to generate these relations in a
natural way. We have numerically studied the degree of fine-tuning in these
models, including one-loop corrections, and have found regions of parameter
space that can satisfy all known collider constraints with fine-tunings less
than 20%. We discuss some of the phenomenological features of these models
within the regions of reduced fine-tuning.Comment: 31 pages, 21 figures. Version accepted for publication in Nuclear
Physics
Universal behavior in the scattering of heavy, weakly interacting dark matter on nuclear targets
Particles that are heavy compared to the electroweak scale (), and
that are charged under electroweak SU(2) gauge interactions display universal
properties such as a characteristic fine structure in the mass spectrum induced
by electroweak symmetry breaking, and an approximately universal cross section
for scattering on nuclear targets. The heavy particle effective theory
framework is developed to compute these properties. As illustration, the spin
independent cross section for low-velocity scattering on a nucleon is evaluated
in the limit , including complete leading-order matching onto quark
and gluon operators, renormalization analysis, and systematic treatment of
perturbative and hadronic-input uncertainties.Comment: 17 pages, 2 figures. v2: minor changes, version to appear in Phys.
Lett.
A microscopic theory of gauge mediation
We construct models of indirect gauge mediation where the dynamics
responsible for breaking supersymmetry simultaneously generates a weakly
coupled subsector of messengers. This provides a microscopic realization of
messenger gauge mediation where the messenger and hidden sector fields are
unified into a single sector. The UV theory is SQCD with massless and massive
quarks plus singlets, and at low energies it flows to a weakly coupled quiver
gauge theory. One node provides the primary source of supersymmetry breaking,
which is then transmitted to the node giving rise to the messenger fields.
These models break R-symmetry spontaneously, produce realistic gaugino and
sfermion masses, and give a heavy gravitino.Comment: 24 pages, 2 figures, accepted to JHEP for publicatio
Fine Tuning in General Gauge Mediation
We study the fine-tuning problem in the context of general gauge mediation.
Numerical analyses toward for relaxing fine-tuning are presented. We analyse
the problem in typical three cases of the messenger scale, that is, GUT
( GeV), intermediate ( GeV), and relatively low energy
( GeV) scales. In each messenger scale, the parameter space reducing the
degree of tuning as around 10% is found. Certain ratios among gluino mass, wino
mass and soft scalar masses are favorable. It is shown that the favorable
region becomes narrow as the messenger scale becomes lower, and tachyonic
initial conditions of stop masses at the messenger scale are favored to relax
the fine-tuning problem for the relatively low energy messenger scale. Our
spectra would also be important from the viewpoint of the problem.Comment: 22 pages, 16 figures, comment adde
The Minimally Tuned Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model
The regions in the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model with the minimal
amount of fine-tuning of electroweak symmetry breaking are presented for
general messenger scale. No a priori relations among the soft supersymmetry
breaking parameters are assumed and fine-tuning is minimized with respect to
all the important parameters which affect electroweak symmetry breaking. The
superpartner spectra in the minimally tuned region of parameter space are quite
distinctive with large stop mixing at the low scale and negative squark soft
masses at the high scale. The minimal amount of tuning increases enormously for
a Higgs mass beyond roughly 120 GeV.Comment: 38 pages, including 2 appendices, 8 figure
Supersymmetry with Light Stops
Recent LHC data, together with the electroweak naturalness argument, suggest
that the top squarks may be significantly lighter than the other sfermions. We
present supersymmetric models in which such a split spectrum is obtained
through "geometries": being "close to" electroweak symmetry breaking implies
being "away from" supersymmetry breaking, and vice versa. In particular, we
present models in 5D warped spacetime, in which supersymmetry breaking and
Higgs fields are located on the ultraviolet and infrared branes, respectively,
and the top multiplets are localized to the infrared brane. The hierarchy of
the Yukawa matrices can be obtained while keeping near flavor degeneracy
between the first two generation sfermions, avoiding stringent constraints from
flavor and CP violation. Through the AdS/CFT correspondence, the models can be
interpreted as purely 4D theories in which the top and Higgs multiplets are
composites of some strongly interacting sector exhibiting nontrivial dynamics
at a low energy. Because of the compositeness of the Higgs and top multiplets,
Landau pole constraints for the Higgs and top couplings apply only up to the
dynamical scale, allowing for a relatively heavy Higgs boson, including m_h =
125 GeV as suggested by the recent LHC data. We analyze electroweak symmetry
breaking for a well-motivated subset of these models, and find that fine-tuning
in electroweak symmetry breaking is indeed ameliorated. We also discuss a flat
space realization of the scenario in which supersymmetry is broken by boundary
conditions, with the top multiplets localized to a brane while other matter
multiplets delocalized in the bulk.Comment: 27 pages, 7 figure
Yukawa Unification and the Superpartner Mass Scale
Naturalness in supersymmetry (SUSY) is under siege by increasingly stringent
LHC constraints, but natural electroweak symmetry breaking still remains the
most powerful motivation for superpartner masses within experimental reach. If
naturalness is the wrong criterion then what determines the mass scale of the
superpartners? We motivate supersymmetry by (1) gauge coupling unification, (2)
dark matter, and (3) precision b-tau Yukawa unification. We show that for an
LSP that is a bino-Higgsino admixture, these three requirements lead to an
upper-bound on the stop and sbottom masses in the several TeV regime because
the threshold correction to the bottom mass at the superpartner scale is
required to have a particular size. For tan beta about 50, which is needed for
t-b-tau unification, the stops must be lighter than 2.8 TeV when A_t has the
opposite sign of the gluino mass, as is favored by renormalization group
scaling. For lower values of tan beta, the top and bottom squarks must be even
lighter. Yukawa unification plus dark matter implies that superpartners are
likely in reach of the LHC, after the upgrade to 14 (or 13) TeV, independent of
any considerations of naturalness. We present a model-independent, bottom-up
analysis of the SUSY parameter space that is simultaneously consistent with
Yukawa unification and the hint for m_h = 125 GeV. We study the flavor and dark
matter phenomenology that accompanies this Yukawa unification. A large portion
of the parameter space predicts that the branching fraction for B_s to mu^+
mu^- will be observed to be significantly lower than the SM value.Comment: 34 pages plus appendices, 20 figure
New Particles Working Group Report of the Snowmass 2013 Community Summer Study
This report summarizes the work of the Energy Frontier New Physics working
group of the 2013 Community Summer Study (Snowmass)
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