Cargando…

Quantum Gravity and Extra Dimensions at High-Energy Colliders

Recently it has been pointed out that the characteristic quantum-gravity scale could be as low as the weak scale in theories with gravity propagating in higher dimensions. The observed smallness of Newton's constant is a consequence of the large compactified volume of the extra dimensions. We i...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Giudice, Gian F., Rattazzi, Riccardo, Wells, James D.
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 1998
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0550-3213(99)00044-9
http://cds.cern.ch/record/370736
_version_ 1780893100462309376
author Giudice, Gian F.
Rattazzi, Riccardo
Wells, James D.
author_facet Giudice, Gian F.
Rattazzi, Riccardo
Wells, James D.
author_sort Giudice, Gian F.
collection CERN
description Recently it has been pointed out that the characteristic quantum-gravity scale could be as low as the weak scale in theories with gravity propagating in higher dimensions. The observed smallness of Newton's constant is a consequence of the large compactified volume of the extra dimensions. We investigate the consequences of this supposition for high-energy collider experiments. We do this by first compactifying the higher dimensional theory and constructing a 3+1-dimensional low-energy effective field theory of the graviton Kaluza-Klein excitations and their interactions with ordinary matter. We then consider graviton production processes, and select photon plus missing energy and jet plus missing energy signatures for careful study. We find that both a 1 TeV e+e- collider and the CERN LHC will be able to reliably and perturbatively probe the fundamental gravity scale up to several TeV, with the precise value depending on the number of extra dimensions. Similarly, searches at LEP2 and the Tevatron are able to probe this scale up to approximately 1 TeV. We also discuss virtual graviton exchange, which induces local dimension-eight operators associated with the square of the energy-momentum tensor. We estimate the size of such operators and study their effects on two fermions to two photons observables.
id cern-370736
institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 1998
record_format invenio
spelling cern-3707362021-10-08T02:33:29Zdoi:10.1016/S0550-3213(99)00044-9http://cds.cern.ch/record/370736engGiudice, Gian F.Rattazzi, RiccardoWells, James D.Quantum Gravity and Extra Dimensions at High-Energy CollidersParticle Physics - PhenomenologyRecently it has been pointed out that the characteristic quantum-gravity scale could be as low as the weak scale in theories with gravity propagating in higher dimensions. The observed smallness of Newton's constant is a consequence of the large compactified volume of the extra dimensions. We investigate the consequences of this supposition for high-energy collider experiments. We do this by first compactifying the higher dimensional theory and constructing a 3+1-dimensional low-energy effective field theory of the graviton Kaluza-Klein excitations and their interactions with ordinary matter. We then consider graviton production processes, and select photon plus missing energy and jet plus missing energy signatures for careful study. We find that both a 1 TeV e+e- collider and the CERN LHC will be able to reliably and perturbatively probe the fundamental gravity scale up to several TeV, with the precise value depending on the number of extra dimensions. Similarly, searches at LEP2 and the Tevatron are able to probe this scale up to approximately 1 TeV. We also discuss virtual graviton exchange, which induces local dimension-eight operators associated with the square of the energy-momentum tensor. We estimate the size of such operators and study their effects on two fermions to two photons observables.Recently it has been pointed out that the characteristic quantum-gravity scale could be as low as the weak scale in theories with gravity propagating in higher dimensions. The observed smallness of Newton's constant is a consequence of the large compactified volume of the extra dimensions. We investigate the consequences of this supposition for high-energy collider experiments. We do this by first compactifying the higher dimensional theory and constructing a 3+1-dimensional low-energy effective field theory of the graviton Kaluza-Klein excitations and their interactions with ordinary matter. We then consider graviton production processes, and select photon plus missing energy and jet plus missing energy signatures for careful study. We find that both a 1 TeV e+e- collider and the CERN LHC will be able to reliably and perturbatively probe the fundamental gravity scale up to several TeV, with the precise value depending on the number of extra dimensions. Similarly, searches at LEP2 and the Tevatron are able to probe this scale up to approximately 1 TeV. We also discuss virtual graviton exchange, which induces local dimension-eight operators associated with the square of the energy-momentum tensor. We estimate the size of such operators and study their effects on two fermions to two photons observables.Recently it has been pointed out that the characteristic quantum-gravity scale could be as low as the weak scale in theories with gravity propagating in higher dimensions. The observed smallness of Newton's constant is a consequence of the large compactified volume of the extra dimensions. We investigate the consequences of this supposition for high-energy collider experiments. We do this by first compactifying the higher dimensional theory and constructing a 3+1-dimensional low-energy effective field theory of the graviton Kaluza-Klein excitations and their interactions with ordinary matter. We then consider graviton production processes, and select photon plus missing energy and jet plus missing energy signatures for careful study. We find that both a 1 TeV e+e- collider and the CERN LHC will be able to reliably and perturbatively probe the fundamental gravity scale up to several TeV, with the precise value depending on the number of extra dimensions. Similarly, searches at LEP2 and the Tevatron are able to probe this scale up to approximately 1 TeV. We also discuss virtual graviton exchange, which induces local dimension-eight operators associated with the square of the energy-momentum tensor. We estimate the size of such operators and study their effects on two fermions to two photons observables.Recently it has been pointed out that the characteristic quantum-gravity scale could be as low as the weak scale in theories with gravity propagating in higher dimensions. The observed smallness of Newton's constant is a consequence of the large compactified volume of the extra dimensions. We investigate the consequences of this supposition for high-energy collider experiments. We do this by first compactifying the higher-dimensional theory and constructing a 3 + 1-dimensional low-energy effective field theory of the graviton Kaluza-Klein excitations and their interactions with ordinary matter. We then consider graviton production processes, and select γ + E ̵ and jet + E ̵ signatures for careful study. We find that both a 1 TeV ϵ + ϵ − collider and the CERN LHC will be able to reliably and perturbatively probe the fundamental gravity scale up to several TeV with the precise value depending on the number of extra dimensions. Similarly, searches at LEP2 and the Tevatron are able to probe this scale up to approximately 1 TeV. We also discuss virtual graviton exchange, which induces local dimension-eight operators associated with the square of the energy-momentum tensor. We estimate the size of such operators and study their effects on f f → γγ observables.hep-ph/9811291CERN-TH-98-354CERN-TH-98-354oai:cds.cern.ch:3707361998-11-11
spellingShingle Particle Physics - Phenomenology
Giudice, Gian F.
Rattazzi, Riccardo
Wells, James D.
Quantum Gravity and Extra Dimensions at High-Energy Colliders
title Quantum Gravity and Extra Dimensions at High-Energy Colliders
title_full Quantum Gravity and Extra Dimensions at High-Energy Colliders
title_fullStr Quantum Gravity and Extra Dimensions at High-Energy Colliders
title_full_unstemmed Quantum Gravity and Extra Dimensions at High-Energy Colliders
title_short Quantum Gravity and Extra Dimensions at High-Energy Colliders
title_sort quantum gravity and extra dimensions at high-energy colliders
topic Particle Physics - Phenomenology
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0550-3213(99)00044-9
http://cds.cern.ch/record/370736
work_keys_str_mv AT giudicegianf quantumgravityandextradimensionsathighenergycolliders
AT rattazziriccardo quantumgravityandextradimensionsathighenergycolliders
AT wellsjamesd quantumgravityandextradimensionsathighenergycolliders