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Naturalness, weak scale supersymmetry, and the prospect for the observation of supersymmetry at the Fermilab Tevatron and at the CERN LHC

Naturalness bounds on weak scale supersymmetry in the context of radiative breaking of the electro-weak symmetry are analyzed. In the case of minimal supergravity it is found that for low tan\beta and for low values of fine tuning Phi, where Phi is defined essentially by the ratio \mu^2/M_Z^2 where...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Chan, K L, Chattopadhyay, U, Nath, Pran
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 1998
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.58.096004
http://cds.cern.ch/record/337126
Descripción
Sumario:Naturalness bounds on weak scale supersymmetry in the context of radiative breaking of the electro-weak symmetry are analyzed. In the case of minimal supergravity it is found that for low tan\beta and for low values of fine tuning Phi, where Phi is defined essentially by the ratio \mu^2/M_Z^2 where \mu is the Higgs mixing parameter and M_Z is the Z boson mass, the allowed values of the universal scalar parameter m_0, and the universal gaugino mass m_{1/2} lie on the surface of an ellipsoid with radii fixed by \Phi leading to tightly constrained upper bounds \sim \sqrt\Phi.Thus for tan\beta\leq 2(\leq 5) it is found that the upper limits for the entire set of sparticle masses lie in the range < 700 GeV (<1.5TeV) for any reasonable range of fine tuning (\Phi\leq 20). However, it is found that there exist regions of the parameter space where the fine tuning does not tightly constrain m_0 and m_{1/2}. Effects of non- universalities in the Higgs sector and in the third generation sector on naturalness bounds are also analyzed and it is found that non-universalities can significantly affect the upper bounds. It is also found that achieving the maximum Higgs mass allowed in supergravity unified models requires a high degree of fine tuning. Thus a heavy sparticle spectrum is indicated if the Higgs mass exceeds 120 GeV. The prospect for the discovery of supersymmetry at the Tevatron and at the LHC in view of these results is discussed.