We study the kinematic cusps and endpoints of processes with the "antler
topology" as a way to measure the masses of the parity-odd missing particle and
the intermediate parent at a high energy lepton collider. The fixed center of
mass energy at a lepton collider makes many new physics processes suitable for
the study of the antler decay topology. It also provides new kinematic
observables with cusp structures, optimal for the missing mass determination.
We also study realistic effects on these observables, including initial state
radiation, beamstrahlung, acceptance cuts, and detector resolution. We find
that the new observables, such as the reconstructed invariant mass of invisible
particles and the summed energy of the observable final state particles, appear
to be more stable than the commonly considered energy endpoints against
realistic factors and are very efficient at measuring the missing particle
mass. For the sake of illustration, we study smuon pair production and chargino
pair production within the framework of the minimal supersymmetric standard
model. We adopt the log-likelihood method to optimize the analysis. We find
that at the 500 GeV ILC, a precision of approximately 0.5 GeV can be achieved
in the case of smuon production with a leptonic final state, and approximately
2 GeV in the case of chargino production with a hadronic final state.Comment: Detector simulations implemented; results update