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Natural Supersymmetry and Implications for Higgs physics

We re-analyze the LHC bounds on light third generation squarks in Natural Supersymmetry, where the sparticles have masses inversely proportional to their leading-log contributions to the electroweak symmetry breaking scale. Higgsinos are the lightest supersymmetric particles; top and bottom squarks...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Kribs, Graham D., Martin, Adam, Menon, Arjun
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.88.035025
http://cds.cern.ch/record/1546018
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author Kribs, Graham D.
Martin, Adam
Menon, Arjun
author_facet Kribs, Graham D.
Martin, Adam
Menon, Arjun
author_sort Kribs, Graham D.
collection CERN
description We re-analyze the LHC bounds on light third generation squarks in Natural Supersymmetry, where the sparticles have masses inversely proportional to their leading-log contributions to the electroweak symmetry breaking scale. Higgsinos are the lightest supersymmetric particles; top and bottom squarks are the next-to-lightest sparticles that decay into both neutral and charged Higgsinos with well-defined branching ratios determined by Yukawa couplings and kinematics. The Higgsinos are nearly degenerate in mass, once the bino and wino masses are taken to their natural (heavy) values. We consider three scenarios for the stop and sbottom masses: (I) $\tilde{t}_R$ is light, (II) $\tilde{t}_L$ and $\tilde{b}_L$ are light, and (III) $\tilde{t}_R$, $\tilde{t}_L$, and $\tilde{b}_L$ are light. Dedicated stop searches are currently sensitive to Scenarios II and III, but not Scenario I. Sbottom-motivated searches ($2 b + \rm{MET}$) impact both squark flavors due to $\tilde{t} \ra b \charp_1$ as well as $\tilde{b} \ra b \neut_{1,2}$, constraining Scenarios I and III with somewhat weaker constraints on Scenario II. The totality of these searches yield relatively strong constraints on Natural Supersymmetry. Two regions that remain are: (1) the "compressed wedge", where $(m_{\tilde{q}} - |\mu|)/m_{\tilde{q}} \ll 1$, and (2) the "kinematic limit" region, where $m_{\tilde{q}} \gsim$ 600-750 GeV, at the kinematic limit of the LHC searches. We calculate the correlated predictions for Higgs physics, demonstrating that these regions lead to distinct predictions for the lightest Higgs couplings that are separable with $\simeq$ 10% measurements. We show that these conclusions remain largely unchanged once the MSSM is extended to the NMSSM in order to naturally obtain a large enough mass for the lightest Higgs boson consistent with LHC data.
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spelling cern-15460182021-07-15T02:50:46Zdoi:10.1103/PhysRevD.88.035025http://cds.cern.ch/record/1546018engKribs, Graham D.Martin, AdamMenon, ArjunNatural Supersymmetry and Implications for Higgs physicsParticle Physics - PhenomenologyWe re-analyze the LHC bounds on light third generation squarks in Natural Supersymmetry, where the sparticles have masses inversely proportional to their leading-log contributions to the electroweak symmetry breaking scale. Higgsinos are the lightest supersymmetric particles; top and bottom squarks are the next-to-lightest sparticles that decay into both neutral and charged Higgsinos with well-defined branching ratios determined by Yukawa couplings and kinematics. The Higgsinos are nearly degenerate in mass, once the bino and wino masses are taken to their natural (heavy) values. We consider three scenarios for the stop and sbottom masses: (I) $\tilde{t}_R$ is light, (II) $\tilde{t}_L$ and $\tilde{b}_L$ are light, and (III) $\tilde{t}_R$, $\tilde{t}_L$, and $\tilde{b}_L$ are light. Dedicated stop searches are currently sensitive to Scenarios II and III, but not Scenario I. Sbottom-motivated searches ($2 b + \rm{MET}$) impact both squark flavors due to $\tilde{t} \ra b \charp_1$ as well as $\tilde{b} \ra b \neut_{1,2}$, constraining Scenarios I and III with somewhat weaker constraints on Scenario II. The totality of these searches yield relatively strong constraints on Natural Supersymmetry. Two regions that remain are: (1) the "compressed wedge", where $(m_{\tilde{q}} - |\mu|)/m_{\tilde{q}} \ll 1$, and (2) the "kinematic limit" region, where $m_{\tilde{q}} \gsim$ 600-750 GeV, at the kinematic limit of the LHC searches. We calculate the correlated predictions for Higgs physics, demonstrating that these regions lead to distinct predictions for the lightest Higgs couplings that are separable with $\simeq$ 10% measurements. We show that these conclusions remain largely unchanged once the MSSM is extended to the NMSSM in order to naturally obtain a large enough mass for the lightest Higgs boson consistent with LHC data.We reanalyze the LHC bounds on light third-generation squarks in natural supersymmetry, where the sparticles have masses inversely proportional to their leading-log contributions to the electroweak symmetry breaking scale. Higgsinos are the lightest supersymmetric particles; top and bottom squarks are the next-to-lightest sparticles that decay into both neutral and charged Higgsinos with well-defined branching ratios determined by Yukawa couplings and kinematics. The Higgsinos are nearly degenerate in mass, once the bino and wino masses are taken to their natural (heavy) values. We consider three scenarios for the stop and sbottom masses: (I) t˜R is light; (II) t˜L and b˜L are light; and (III) t˜R, t˜L, and b˜L are light. Dedicated stop searches are currently sensitive to scenarios II and III but not scenario I. Sbottom-motivated searches (2b+MET) impact both squark flavors due to t˜→bχ˜1+ as well as b˜→bχ˜1,20, constraining scenarios I and III with somewhat weaker constraints on scenario II. The totality of these searches yields relatively strong constraints on natural supersymmetry. Two regions that remain are (1) the “compressed wedge,” where (mq˜-|μ|)/mq˜≪1 and (2) the “kinematic limit” region, where mq˜≳600–750  GeV, at the kinematic limit of the LHC searches. We calculate the correlated predictions for Higgs physics, demonstrating that these regions lead to distinct predictions for the lightest Higgs couplings that are separable with ≃10% measurements. We show that these conclusions remain largely unchanged once the minimal supersymmetric standard model is extended to the nonminimal supersymmetric standard model in order to naturally obtain a large enough mass for the lightest Higgs boson consistent with LHC data.We re-analyze the LHC bounds on light third generation squarks in Natural Supersymmetry, where the sparticles have masses inversely proportional to their leading-log contributions to the electroweak symmetry breaking scale. Higgsinos are the lightest supersymmetric particles; top and bottom squarks are the next-to-lightest sparticles that decay into both neutral and charged Higgsinos with well-defined branching ratios determined by Yukawa couplings and kinematics. The Higgsinos are nearly degenerate in mass, once the bino and wino masses are taken to their natural (heavy) values. We consider three scenarios for the stop and sbottom masses: (I) $\tilde{t}_R$ is light, (II) $\tilde{t}_L$ and $\tilde{b}_L$ are light, and (III) $\tilde{t}_R$, $\tilde{t}_L$, and $\tilde{b}_L$ are light. Dedicated stop searches are currently sensitive to Scenarios II and III, but not Scenario I. Sbottom-motivated searches ($2 b + \rm{MET}$) impact both squark flavors due to $\tilde{t} \ra b \charp_1$ as well as $\tilde{b} \ra b \neut_{1,2}$, constraining Scenarios I and III with somewhat weaker constraints on Scenario II. The totality of these searches yield relatively strong constraints on Natural Supersymmetry. Two regions that remain are: (1) the "compressed wedge", where $(m_{\tilde{q}} - |\mu|)/m_{\tilde{q}} \ll 1$, and (2) the "kinematic limit" region, where $m_{\tilde{q}} \gsim 600-750 GeV, at the kinematic limit of the LHC searches. We calculate the correlated predictions for Higgs physics, demonstrating that these regions lead to distinct predictions for the lightest Higgs couplings that are separable with $\simeq 10% measurements. We show that these conclusions remain largely unchanged once the MSSM is extended to the NMSSM in order to naturally obtain a large enough mass for the lightest Higgs boson consistent with LHC data.arXiv:1305.1313CERN-PH-TH-2013-095CERN-PH-TH-2013-095oai:cds.cern.ch:15460182013-05-08
spellingShingle Particle Physics - Phenomenology
Kribs, Graham D.
Martin, Adam
Menon, Arjun
Natural Supersymmetry and Implications for Higgs physics
title Natural Supersymmetry and Implications for Higgs physics
title_full Natural Supersymmetry and Implications for Higgs physics
title_fullStr Natural Supersymmetry and Implications for Higgs physics
title_full_unstemmed Natural Supersymmetry and Implications for Higgs physics
title_short Natural Supersymmetry and Implications for Higgs physics
title_sort natural supersymmetry and implications for higgs physics
topic Particle Physics - Phenomenology
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.88.035025
http://cds.cern.ch/record/1546018
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