18,860 research outputs found

    The Discovery of the Higgs Boson with the CMS Detector and its Implications for Supersymmetry and Cosmology

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    The discovery of the long awaited Higgs boson is described using data from the CMS detector at the LHC. In the SM the masses of fermions and the heavy gauge bosons are generated by the interactions with the Higgs field, so all couplings are related to the observed masses. Indeed, all observed couplings are consistent with the predictions from the Higgs mechanism, both to vector bosons and fermions implying that masses are indeed consistent of being generated by the interactions with the Higgs field. However, on a cosmological scale the mass of the universe seems not to be related to the Higgs field: the baryonic mass originates from the binding energy of the quarks inside the nuclei and dark matter is not even predicted in the SM, so the origin of its mass is unknown. The dominant energy component in the universe, the dark energy, yields an accelerated expansion of the universe, so its repulsive gravity most likely originates from a kind of vacuum energy. The Higgs field would be the prime candidate for this, if the energy density would not be many orders of magnitude too high, as will be calculated. The Higgs mass is found to be 125.7±\pm0.3(stat.)±\pm0.3(syst.) GeV, which is below 130 GeV, i.e. in the range predicted by supersymmetry. This may be the strongest hint for supersymmetry in spite of the fact that the predicted supersymmetric particles have not been discovered so far.Comment: 26 pages, Conference Proceedings Time and Matter (TAM2013), Venice, Feb. 201

    An effective scanning method of the NMSSM parameter space

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    The next-to-minimal supersymmetric standard model (NMSSM) naturally provides a 125 GeV Higgs boson without the need for large loop corrections from multi-TeV stop quarks. Furthermore, the NMSSM provides an electroweak scale dark matter candidate consistent with all experimental data, like relic density and non-observation of direct dark matter signals with the present experimental sensitivity. However, more free parameters are introduced in the NMSSM, which are strongly correlated. A simple parameter scan without knowing the correlation matrix is not efficient and can miss significant regions of the parameter space. We introduce a new technique to sample the NMSSM parameter space, which takes into account the correlations. For this we project the 7D NMSSM parameter space onto the 3D Higgs boson mass parameter space. The reduced dimensionality allows for a non-random sampling and therefore a complete coverage of the allowed NMSSM parameters. In addition, the parameter correlations and possible deviations of the signal strengths of the observed 125 Higgs boson from the SM values are easily predicted.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figure

    Spontaneous electro-weak symmetry breaking and cold dark matter

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    In the standard model, the weak gauge bosons and fermions obtain mass after spontaneous electro-weak symmetry breaking, which is realized through one fundamental scalar field, namely Higgs field. In this paper we study the simplest scalar cold dark matter model in which the scalar cold dark matter also obtains mass through interaction with the weak-doublet Higgs field, the same way as those of weak gauge bosons and fermions. Our study shows that the correct cold dark matter relic abundance within 3σ3\sigma uncertainty (0.093<Ωdmh2<0.129 0.093 < \Omega_{dm} h^2 < 0.129 ) and experimentally allowed Higgs boson mass (114.4≤mh≤208114.4 \le m_h \le 208 GeV) constrain the scalar dark matter mass within 48≤mS≤7848 \le m_S \le 78 GeV. This result is in excellent agreement with that of W. de Boer et.al. (50∼10050 \sim 100 GeV). Such kind of dark matter annihilation can account for the observed gamma rays excess (10σ10\sigma) at EGRET for energies above 1 GeV in comparison with the expectations from conventional Galactic models. We also investigate other phenomenological consequences of this model. For example, the Higgs boson decays dominantly into scalar cold dark matter if its mass lies within 48∼6448 \sim 64 GeV.Comment: 4 Revtex4 pages, refs adde

    A new Determination of the Extragalactic Background of Diffuse Gamma Rays taking into account Dark Matter Annihilation

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    The extragalactic background (EGB) of diffuse gamma rays can be determined by subtracting the Galactic contribution from the data. This requires a Galactic model (GM) and we include for the first time the contribution of dark matter annihilation (DMA), which was previously proposed as an explanation for the EGRET excess of diffuse Galactic gamma rays above 1 GeV. In this paper it is shown that the newly determined EGB shows a characteristic high energy bump on top of a steeply falling soft contribution. The bump is shown to be compatible with a contribution from an extragalactic DMA signal from weakly interacting massive particles (WIMPs) with a mass between 50 and 100 GeV in agreement with the EGRET excess of the Galactic diffuse gamma rays and in disagreement with earlier analysis. The remaining soft contribution of the EGB is shown to resemble the spectra of the observed point sources in our Galaxy.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures. Accepted by A&A, made Fig. 4 and table 1 consisten

    Further search for a neutral boson with a mass around 9 MeV/c2

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    Two dedicated experiments on internal pair conversion (IPC) of isoscalar M1 transitions were carried out in order to test a 9 MeV/c2 X-boson scenario. In the 7Li(p,e+e-)8Be reaction at 1.1 MeV proton energy to the predominantly T=0 level at 18.15 MeV, a significant deviation from IPC was observed at large pair correlation angles. In the 11B(d,n e+e-)12C reaction at 1.6 MeV, leading to the 12.71 MeV 1+ level with pure T=0 character, an anomaly was observed at 9 MeV/c2. The compatibility of the results with the scenario is discussed.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures, 2 table
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