6 research outputs found
Heart of Darkness: The Significance of the Zeptobarn Scale for Neutralino Direct Detection
The direct detection of dark matter through its elastic scattering off
nucleons is among the most promising methods for establishing the particle
identity of dark matter. The current bound on the spin-independent scattering
cross section is sigma^SI < 10 zb for dark matter masses m_chi ~ 100 GeV, with
improved sensitivities expected soon. We examine the implications of this
progress for neutralino dark matter. We work in a supersymmetric framework
well-suited to dark matter studies that is simple and transparent, with models
defined in terms of four weak-scale parameters. We first show that robust
constraints on electric dipole moments motivate large sfermion masses mtilde >
1 TeV, effectively decoupling squarks and sleptons from neutralino dark matter
phenomenology. In this case, we find characteristic cross sections in the
narrow range 1 zb 70 GeV. As sfermion masses are
lowered to near their experimental limit mtilde ~ 400 GeV, the upper and lower
limits of this range are extended, but only by factors of around two, and the
lower limit is not significantly altered by relaxing many particle physics
assumptions, varying the strange quark content of the nucleon, including the
effects of galactic small-scale structure, or assuming other components of dark
matter. Experiments are therefore rapidly entering the heart of dark
matter-favored supersymmetry parameter space. If no signal is seen,
supersymmetric models must contain some level of fine-tuning, and we identify
and analyze several possibilities. Barring large cancellations, however, in a
large and generic class of models, if thermal relic neutralinos are a
significant component of dark matter, experiments will discover them as they
probe down to the zeptobarn scale.Comment: 35 pages, 11 figures; v2: references added, figures extended to 2 TeV
neutralino masses, XENON100 results included, published versio
PAMELA and FERMI-LAT limits on the neutralino-chargino mass degeneracy
Searches for Dark Matter (DM) particles with indirect detection techniques
have reached important milestones with the precise measurements of the
anti-proton and gamma-ray spectra, notably by the PAMELA and FERMI-LAT
experiments. While the gamma-ray results have been used to test the thermal
Dark Matter hypothesis and constrain the Dark Matter annihilation cross section
into Standard Model (SM) particles, the anti-proton flux measured by the PAMELA
experiment remains relatively unexploited. Here we show that the latter can be
used to set a constraint on the neutralino-chargino mass difference. To
illustrate our point we use a Supersymmetric model in which the gauginos are
light, the sfermions are heavy and the Lightest Supersymmetric Particle (LSP)
is the neutralino. In this framework the W^+ W^- production is expected to be
significant, thus leading to large anti-proton and gamma-ray fluxes. After
determining a generic limit on the Dark Matter pair annihilation cross section
into W^+ W^- from the anti-proton data only, we show that one can constrain
scenarios in which the neutralino-chargino mass difference is as large as ~ 20
GeV for a mixed neutralino (and intermediate choices of the anti-proton
propagation scheme). This result is consistent with the limit obtained by using
the FERMI-LAT data. As a result, we can safely rule out the pure wino
neutralino hypothesis if it is lighter than 450 GeV and constitutes all the
Dark Matter.Comment: 22page
Lightest-neutralino decays in R_p-violating models with dominant lambda^{prime} and lambda couplings
Decays of the lightest neutralino are studied in R_p-violating models with
operators lambda^{prime} L Q D^c and lambda L L E^c involving third-generation
matter fields and with dominant lambda^{prime} and lambda couplings.
Generalizations to decays of the lightest neutralino induced by subdominant
lambda^{prime} and lambda couplings are straightforward. Decays with the
top-quark among the particles produced are considered, in addition to those
with an almost massless final state. Phenomenological analyses for examples of
both classes of decays are presented. No specific assumption on the composition
of the lightest neutralino is made, and the formulae listed here can be easily
generalized to study decays of heavier neutralinos. It has been recently
pointed out that, for a sizable coupling lambda^{prime}_{333}, tau-sleptons may
be copiously produced at the LHC as single supersymmetric particles, in
association with top- and bottom-quark pairs. This analysis of neutralino
decays is, therefore, a first step towards the reconstruction of the complete
final state produced in this case.Comment: 40 pages, 11 figures, version to appear in JHE
Lower limit on the neutralino mass in the general MSSM
We discuss constraints on SUSY models with non-unified gaugino masses and R_P
conservation. We derive a lower bound on the neutralino mass combining the
direct limits from LEP, the indirect limits from gmuon, bsgamma, Bsmumu and the
relic density constraint from WMAP. The lightest neutralino (mneutralino=6GeV)
is found in models with a light pseudoscalar with MA<200GeV and a large value
for . Models with heavy pseudoscalars lead to mneutralino>18(29)GeV
for . We show that even a very conservative bound from the
muon anomalous magnetic moment can increase the lower bound on the neutralino
mass in models with mu<0 and/or large values of . We then examine
the potential of the Tevatron and the direct detection experiments to probe the
SUSY models with the lightest neutralinos allowed in the context of light
pseudoscalars with high . We also examine the potential of an e+e-
collider of 500GeV to produce SUSY particles in all models with neutralinos
lighter than the W. In contrast to the mSUGRA models, observation of at least
one sparticle is not always guaranteed.Comment: 37 pages, LateX, 16 figures, paper with higher resolution figures
available at
http://wwwlapp.in2p3.fr/~boudjema/papers/bound-lsp/bound-lsp.htm
Probing non-universal gaugino masses via Higgs boson production under SUSY cascades at the LHC: A detailed study
Cascade decays of Supersymmetric (SUSY) particles are likely to be prolific
sources of Higgs bosons at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC). In this work, we
explore, with the help of detailed simulation, the role of non-universal
gaugino masses in the production of the Higgs bosons under SUSY cascades. The
analysis is carried out by choosing an appropriate set of benchmark points with
non-universal gaugino masses in the relevant SUSY parameter space and then
contrasting the resulting observations with the corresponding cases having
universal relationship among the same. It is shown that even of data at an
early phase of the LHC-run with 10 fb one would be able to see, under
favourable situations, the imprint of non-universal gaugino masses by
reconstructing various Higgs boson resonances and comparing their rates. With
increased accumulated luminosities, the indications would naturally become
distinct over a larger region of the parameter space.Comment: 48 page
