Cargando…

Who's Afraid of the Supersymmetric Dark? The Standard Model vs Low-Energy Supergravity

Use of supergravity equations in astronomy and late-universe cosmology is often criticized on three grounds: ($i$) phenomenological success usually depends on the supergravity form for the scalar potential applying at the relevant energies; ($ii$) the low-energy scalar potential is extremely sensiti...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Burgess, C.P., Quevedo, Fernando
Publicado: 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/2789340
_version_ 1780972176167403520
author Burgess, C.P.
Quevedo, Fernando
author_facet Burgess, C.P.
Quevedo, Fernando
author_sort Burgess, C.P.
collection CERN
description Use of supergravity equations in astronomy and late-universe cosmology is often criticized on three grounds: ($i$) phenomenological success usually depends on the supergravity form for the scalar potential applying at the relevant energies; ($ii$) the low-energy scalar potential is extremely sensitive to quantum effects involving very massive particles and so is rarely well-approximated by classical calculations of its form; and ($iii$) almost all Standard Model particles count as massive for these purposes and none of these are supersymmetric. Why should Standard Model loops preserve the low-energy supergravity form even if supersymmetry is valid at energies well above the electroweak scale? We use recently developed tools for coupling supergravity to non-supersymmetric matter to estimate the loop effects of heavy non-supersymmetric particles on the low-energy effective action, and provide evidence that the supergravity form is stable against integrating out such particles (and so argues against the above objection). This suggests an intrinsically supersymmetric picture of Nature where supersymmetry survives to low energies within the gravity sector but not the visible sector (for which supersymmetry is instead non-linearly realized). We explore the couplings of both sectors in this picture and find that the presence of auxiliary fields in the gravity sector makes the visible sector share many features usually attributed to linearly realized supersymmetry although (unlike for the MSSM) a second Higgs doublet is not required for all Yukawa couplings to be non-vanishing and changes the dimension of the operator generating the Higgs mass. We discuss the naturalness of this picture and some of the implications it might have when searching for dark-sector physics.
id cern-2789340
institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
publishDate 2021
record_format invenio
spelling cern-27893402021-11-01T21:37:23Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/2789340Burgess, C.P.Quevedo, FernandoWho's Afraid of the Supersymmetric Dark? The Standard Model vs Low-Energy SupergravityParticle Physics - TheoryUse of supergravity equations in astronomy and late-universe cosmology is often criticized on three grounds: ($i$) phenomenological success usually depends on the supergravity form for the scalar potential applying at the relevant energies; ($ii$) the low-energy scalar potential is extremely sensitive to quantum effects involving very massive particles and so is rarely well-approximated by classical calculations of its form; and ($iii$) almost all Standard Model particles count as massive for these purposes and none of these are supersymmetric. Why should Standard Model loops preserve the low-energy supergravity form even if supersymmetry is valid at energies well above the electroweak scale? We use recently developed tools for coupling supergravity to non-supersymmetric matter to estimate the loop effects of heavy non-supersymmetric particles on the low-energy effective action, and provide evidence that the supergravity form is stable against integrating out such particles (and so argues against the above objection). This suggests an intrinsically supersymmetric picture of Nature where supersymmetry survives to low energies within the gravity sector but not the visible sector (for which supersymmetry is instead non-linearly realized). We explore the couplings of both sectors in this picture and find that the presence of auxiliary fields in the gravity sector makes the visible sector share many features usually attributed to linearly realized supersymmetry although (unlike for the MSSM) a second Higgs doublet is not required for all Yukawa couplings to be non-vanishing and changes the dimension of the operator generating the Higgs mass. We discuss the naturalness of this picture and some of the implications it might have when searching for dark-sector physics.CERN-TH-2021-177oai:cds.cern.ch:27893402021-11-01
spellingShingle Particle Physics - Theory
Burgess, C.P.
Quevedo, Fernando
Who's Afraid of the Supersymmetric Dark? The Standard Model vs Low-Energy Supergravity
title Who's Afraid of the Supersymmetric Dark? The Standard Model vs Low-Energy Supergravity
title_full Who's Afraid of the Supersymmetric Dark? The Standard Model vs Low-Energy Supergravity
title_fullStr Who's Afraid of the Supersymmetric Dark? The Standard Model vs Low-Energy Supergravity
title_full_unstemmed Who's Afraid of the Supersymmetric Dark? The Standard Model vs Low-Energy Supergravity
title_short Who's Afraid of the Supersymmetric Dark? The Standard Model vs Low-Energy Supergravity
title_sort who's afraid of the supersymmetric dark? the standard model vs low-energy supergravity
topic Particle Physics - Theory
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/2789340
work_keys_str_mv AT burgesscp whosafraidofthesupersymmetricdarkthestandardmodelvslowenergysupergravity
AT quevedofernando whosafraidofthesupersymmetricdarkthestandardmodelvslowenergysupergravity