43 research outputs found
Spontaneous CP Violation in Non-Minimal Supersymmetric Models
We study the possibilities of spontaneous CP violation in the Next-to-Minimal
Supersymmetric Standard Model with an extra singlet tadpole term in the scalar
potential. We calculate the Higgs boson masses and couplings with radiative
corrections including dominant two loop terms. We show that it is possible to
satisfy the LEP constraints on the Higgs boson spectrum with non-trivial
spontaneous CP violating phases. We also show that these phases could account
for the observed value of epsilonK.Comment: 21 pages, 7 Figures in Encapsulated Postscrip
Natural Dark Matter from an Unnatural Higgs Boson and New Colored Particles at the TeV Scale
The thermal relic abundance of Dark Matter motivates the existence of new
electroweak scale particles, independent of naturalness considerations.
However, most unnatural Dark Matter models do not ensure the presence of new
particles charged under SU(3)_C, resulting in challenging LHC phenomenology.
Here, we present a class of models with scalar electroweak doublet Dark Matter
that require a host of colored particles at the TeV scale. In these models, the
Higgs boson is apparently fine-tuned, but the Dark Matter doublet is kept light
without any additional fine-tuning.Comment: 1+22 pages, 5 figures. Added references. Minor clarification
Theoretical predictions for the direct detection of neutralino dark matter in the NMSSM
We analyse the direct detection of neutralino dark matter in the framework of
the Next-to-Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model. After performing a detailed
analysis of the parameter space, taking into account all the available
constraints from LEPII, we compute the neutralino-nucleon cross section, and
compare the results with the sensitivity of detectors. We find that sizable
values for the detection cross section, within the reach of dark matter
detectors, are attainable in this framework. For example, neutralino-proton
cross sections compatible with the sensitivity of present experiments can be
obtained due to the exchange of very light Higgses with m_{h_1^0}\lsim 70
GeV. Such Higgses have a significant singlet composition, thus escaping
detection and being in agreement with accelerator data. The lightest neutralino
in these cases exhibits a large singlino-Higgsino composition, and a mass in
the range 50\lsim m_{\tilde\chi_1^0}\lsim 100 GeV.Comment: Final version to appear in JHEP. References added. LaTeX, 53 pages,
23 figure
Squark anti-squark pair production at the LHC: the electroweak contribution
We present the complete NLO electroweak contribution of
to the production of diagonal
squark--anti-squark pairs in proton--proton collisions. Compared to the
lowest-order electroweak terms, the
NLO contributions are also significant. We discuss the LO and NLO electroweak
effects in cross sections and distributions at the LHC for the production of
squarks different from top squarks, in various supersymmetric benchmark
scenarios.Comment: 38 pages, 21 figures. Replaced with the version published in JHE
Is "just-so" Higgs splitting needed for t-b-\tau Yukawa unified SUSY GUTs?
Recent renormalization group calculations of the sparticle mass spectrum in
the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model (MSSM) show that t-b-\tau Yukawa
coupling unification at M_{\rm GUT} is possible when the mass spectra follow
the pattern of a radiatively induced inverted scalar mass hierarchy. The
calculation is entirely consistent with expectations from SO(10) SUSY GUT
theories, with one exception: it seems to require MSSM Higgs soft term mass
splitting at M_{\rm GUT}, dubbed "just-so Higgs splitting" (HS) in the
literature, which apparently violates the SO(10) gauge symmetry. Here, we
investigate three alternative effects: {\it i}). SO(10) D-term splitting, {\it
ii}). inclusion of right hand neutrino in the RG calculation, and {\it iii}).
first/third generation scalar mass splitting. By combining all three effects
(the DR3 model), we find t-b-\tau Yukawa unification at M_{\rm GUT} can be
achieved at the 2.5% level. In the DR3 case, we expect lighter (and possibly
detectable) third generation and heavy Higgs scalars than in the model with HS.
In addition, the light bottom squark in DR3 should be dominantly a right state,
while in the HS model, it is dominantly a left state.Comment: 21 pages with 11 .eps figures; revised version added two reference
The Minimally Tuned Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model
The regions in the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model with the minimal
amount of fine-tuning of electroweak symmetry breaking are presented for
general messenger scale. No a priori relations among the soft supersymmetry
breaking parameters are assumed and fine-tuning is minimized with respect to
all the important parameters which affect electroweak symmetry breaking. The
superpartner spectra in the minimally tuned region of parameter space are quite
distinctive with large stop mixing at the low scale and negative squark soft
masses at the high scale. The minimal amount of tuning increases enormously for
a Higgs mass beyond roughly 120 GeV.Comment: 38 pages, including 2 appendices, 8 figure
An origin for small neutrino masses in the NMSSM
We consider the Next to Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model (NMSSM) which
provides a natural solution to the so-called mu problem by introducing a new
gauge-singlet superfield S. We realize that a new mechanism of neutrino mass
suppression, based on the R-parity violating bilinear terms mu_i L_i H_u mixing
neutrinos and higgsinos, arises within the NMSSM, offering thus an original
solution to the neutrino mass problem (connected to the solution for the mu
problem). We generate realistic (Majorana) neutrino mass values without
requiring any strong hierarchy amongst the fundamental parameters, in contrast
with the alternative models. In particular, the ratio |mu_i/mu| can reach about
10^-1, unlike in the MSSM where it has to be much smaller than unity. We check
that the obtained parameters also satisfy the collider constraints and internal
consistencies of the NMSSM. The price to pay for this new cancellation-type
mechanism of neutrino mass reduction is a certain fine tuning, which get
significantly improved in some regions of parameter space. Besides, we discuss
the feasibility of our scenario when the R-parity violating bilinear terms have
a common origin with the mu term, namely when those are generated via a VEV of
the S scalar component from the couplings lambda_i S L_i H_u. Finally, we make
comments on some specific phenomenology of the NMSSM in the presence of
R-parity violating bilinear terms.Comment: 21 pages, 5 figures, Latex fil
Markov Chain Monte Carlo Exploration of Minimal Supergravity with Implications for Dark Matter
We explore the full parameter space of Minimal Supergravity (mSUGRA),
allowing all four continuous parameters (the scalar mass m_0, the gaugino mass
m_1/2, the trilinear coupling A_0, and the ratio of Higgs vacuum expectation
values tan beta) to vary freely. We apply current accelerator constraints on
sparticle and Higgs masses, and on the b -> s gamma branching ratio, and
discuss the impact of the constraints on g_mu-2. To study dark matter, we apply
the WMAP constraint on the cold dark matter density. We develop Markov Chain
Monte Carlo (MCMC) techniques to explore the parameter regions consistent with
WMAP, finding them to be considerably superior to previously used methods for
exploring supersymmetric parameter spaces. Finally, we study the reach of
current and future direct detection experiments in light of the WMAP
constraint.Comment: 16 pages, 4 figure
Upper and Lower Limits on Neutralino WIMP Mass and Spin--Independent Scattering Cross Section, and Impact of New (g-2)_{mu} Measurement
We derive the allowed ranges of the spin--independent interaction cross
section \sigsip for the elastic scattering of neutralinos on proton for wide
ranges of parameters of the general Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model. We
investigate the effects of the lower limits on Higgs and superpartner masses
from colliders, as well as the impact of constraints from \bsgamma and the
new measurement of \gmtwo on the upper and lower limits on \sigsip. We
further explore the impact of the neutralino relic density, including
coannihilation, and of theoretical assumptions about the largest allowed values
of the supersymmetric parameters. For , requiring the latter to lie
below 1\tev leads to \sigsip\gsim 10^{-11}\pb at \mchi\sim100\gev and
\sigsip\gsim 10^{-8}\pb at \mchi\sim1\tev. When the supersymmetric
parameters are allowed above 1\tev, for 440\gev \lsim \mchi\lsim 1020 \gev
we derive a {\em parameter--independent lower limit} of \sigsip \gsim 2\times
10^{-12}\pb. (No similar lower limits can be set for nor for
1020\gev\lsim\mchi\lsim2.6\tev.) Requiring \abundchi<0.3 implies a {\em
parameter--independent upper limit} \mchi\lsim2.6\tev. The new \epem--based
measurement of restricts \mchi\lsim 350\gev at CL
and \mchi\lsim515\gev at CL, and implies . The largest
allowed values of \sigsip have already become accessible to recent
experimental searches.Comment: LaTeX, 17 pages, 9 eps figures. Version to appear in JHE
SUSY Resonances from UHE neutralinos in Neutrino Telescopes and in the Sky
In the Top-down scenarios, the decay of super-heavy particles
(m~10^{12-16}GeV), situated in dark-matter halos not very far from our Galaxy,
can explain the ultra-high-energy (UHE) cosmic-ray spectrum beyond the
Griesen-Zatasepin-Kuzmin cut-off. In the MSSM, a major component of the UHE
cosmic-ray flux at PeV-EeV energies could be given by the lightest neutralino
\chi, that is the lightest stable supersymmetric particle. Then, the signal of
UHE \chi's on earth might emerge over the interactions of a comparable neutrino
component. We compute the event rates for the resonant production of "right"
selectrons and "right" squarks in mSUGRA, when UHE neutralinos of energy larger
than 10^5 GeV scatter off electrons and quarks in an earth-based detector like
IceCube. When the resonant channel dominates in the total \chi-e,\chi-q
scattering cross section, the only model parameters affecting the corresponding
visible signal rates turn out to be the physical masses of the resonant
right-scalar and of the lightest neutralino. We compare the expected number of
supersymmetric events with the rates corresponding to the expected Glashow W
resonance and to the continuum UHE \nu-N scattering for realistic power-law
spectra. We find that the event rate in the leptonic selectron channel is
particularly promising, and can reach a few tens for a one-year exposure in
IceCube. Finally, we note that UHE neutralinos at much higher energies (up to
hundreds ZeV) may produce sneutrino resonances by scattering off relic
neutrinos in the Local Group hot dark halo. The consequent \tilde{\nu}-burst
into hadronic final states could mimic Z-burst events, although with quite
smaller conversion efficiency.Comment: 23 pages, 4 figures; one reference adde
