Probing the Sevolution of the Universe at the LHC

54
Amitava Datta Department of Physics Jadavpur University Kolkata

description

Probing the Sevolution of the Universe at the LHC. Amitava Datta Department of Physics Jadavpur University Kolkata. INTRODUCTION AND BASIC FACTS. DARK MATTER. : Most popular Candidate. Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP) Data. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Probing the Sevolution of the Universe at the LHC

Page 1: Probing the Sevolution  of the Universe  at the LHC

Amitava Datta

Department of Physics

Jadavpur University

Kolkata

Page 2: Probing the Sevolution  of the Universe  at the LHC

INTRODUCTION

AND

BASIC FACTS

Page 3: Probing the Sevolution  of the Universe  at the LHC

DARK MATTER

Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe(WMAP) Data

: Most popular Candidate

Page 4: Probing the Sevolution  of the Universe  at the LHC

EVOLUTION OF THE UNIVERSE AND DARK MATTER

Early Universe: particles and sparticles in thermal equilibrium.

Universe Cools and Expands :

Too little thermal energy to produce heavySparticles. They annihilate and decay into particles and the LSP

LSP and particles in equilibrium

Page 5: Probing the Sevolution  of the Universe  at the LHC

The Expansion Continues: LSP density decreases, annihilation rate becomes small compared to the expansion rate of the universe, EQUILIBRIUM IS LOST AND THE LSP EXPERIENCES FREEZE OUT

The LSP density today is determined by this small rate and further dilution due to expansion of the universe.

Compute using MICROMEGAS, DARKSUSY…………

Page 6: Probing the Sevolution  of the Universe  at the LHC

Important parameters: LSP mass and annihilation x-sec (depends on other SUSY parameters)

Co-annihilation: Slightly heavier sparticlesmay exist longer in equilibrium with the LSP with comparable numbers and annihilate each other.

This co-annihilation x-sec (depends on other SUSY parameters) is also important for the LSP relic density.

Page 7: Probing the Sevolution  of the Universe  at the LHC

The Generic Scenarios

LSP Annihilation and Co-annihilation

Page 8: Probing the Sevolution  of the Universe  at the LHC

LSP Annihilation Diagram

Bino-like LSP and light sfermion (R-type)gives reasonably high x-sec and not too large density ( The Bulk Region )

Page 9: Probing the Sevolution  of the Universe  at the LHC

Resonant annihilation into Higgses

Page 10: Probing the Sevolution  of the Universe  at the LHC

LSP Co-annihilation

Examples

Page 11: Probing the Sevolution  of the Universe  at the LHC

Annihilation into Gauge Bosons

The LSP has significant

a) Higgsino components ( e.g., The Focus Point/Hyperbolic Branch region in mSUGRA)(J. Feng et al hep-ph/9909334; K.Chan et al hep-ph/ 9710473 ).

b) Wino component ( e.g., The AMSB model) See, e.g., Utpal Chattopadhyaya et al hep-ph/0610077

Page 12: Probing the Sevolution  of the Universe  at the LHC

Plan of The Talk

• Realization of various scenarios in mSUGRA

• Tests at LHC

• Beyond mSUGRA

• Conclusions

Ref1: Tevatron-for-LHC Report, S. Abdullin et al, hep-ph/0608322

Page 13: Probing the Sevolution  of the Universe  at the LHC

Realization of various scenarios in mSUGRA

Page 14: Probing the Sevolution  of the Universe  at the LHC

H. Baer et al in Ref 1

mSUGRA low tan

Focus Point

Region ???

Page 15: Probing the Sevolution  of the Universe  at the LHC

A. Belyaev : Hunting for SUSY……(2005)

Allowed Regions in mSUGRA

Page 16: Probing the Sevolution  of the Universe  at the LHC

LHC REACH

Tip of the Higgs funnel? FP region?

Page 17: Probing the Sevolution  of the Universe  at the LHC

Tests at LHC

Distinctive features of the signal for each region of the parameter space (circumstantial evidences)

Quantitative or semi-quantitative tests (determination of masses and mass differences –certainly ILC will do a better job if the sparticles are accessible)

Page 18: Probing the Sevolution  of the Universe  at the LHC

Gluino pair-production

Parton level simulation (U. Chattopadhyay et al

hep-ph/000822 ) :large number of b-jets in the signal.

Electroweak gaugino production and decay

H. Baer et al hep-ph/0507282

Very heavy squark , sleptons ; relatively light gauginos

LHC SIGNALS OF FOCUS POINT SUPERSYMMETRY

Page 19: Probing the Sevolution  of the Universe  at the LHC

Further works on gluino Further works on gluino pair-production pair-production

Simulation at the generator level ( P. G. Mercadante et al hep-ph/0506142) b-tagging improves the discovery reach.

Inclusion of hitherto neglected but potentially dangerous backgrounds (S.P. Das, A. D., M. Maity and M. Guchait – in preparation)

Page 20: Probing the Sevolution  of the Universe  at the LHC

Handling the New Backgrounds

• tttt, ttbb, bbbb, ttqq, bbqq,……………

•Events generated with CompHEP, ALPGEN, MADGRAPH

• Events interfaced with Pythia for simulation

Page 21: Probing the Sevolution  of the Universe  at the LHC

Signal Features Cut Background

removed

Page 22: Probing the Sevolution  of the Universe  at the LHC
Page 23: Probing the Sevolution  of the Universe  at the LHC

New backgrounds under control

Page 24: Probing the Sevolution  of the Universe  at the LHC

The stau coannihilation

•Distinctive feature: large number of low energy -pairs in the signal .

•Detection efficiency of low PT taus ? ( assume detection efficiency >50% for PT visible > 20 GEV)

•Measurement of M ( approximately 15 GeV or smaller) ( 3 –10

fb-1 of data)

Recent work:R.Arnowitt et al hep-ph /0603128

Page 25: Probing the Sevolution  of the Universe  at the LHC

Invariant mass distribution

(VISIBLE)

Page 26: Probing the Sevolution  of the Universe  at the LHC

Shift of the peak with M

Page 27: Probing the Sevolution  of the Universe  at the LHC

The (“disfavoured”)Bulk Region

Disfavoured in mSUGRA for A0 = 0

Page 28: Probing the Sevolution  of the Universe  at the LHC

LEP constraints A0=0 (LEP-SUSY WG)

Page 29: Probing the Sevolution  of the Universe  at the LHC

Weaker constraints for large A0

Page 30: Probing the Sevolution  of the Universe  at the LHC

The BULK revisited

•Light sleptons

•Light stop: discovery at Tevatron ?

•Potential constraints (for large A0 )

Page 31: Probing the Sevolution  of the Universe  at the LHC

Allowed Region Large A0

L. S. Stark et al hepph/0502197

Page 32: Probing the Sevolution  of the Universe  at the LHC

Allowed Region Large A0

with CCB Constraint

Page 33: Probing the Sevolution  of the Universe  at the LHC

A Point in the WMAP Allowed Bulk Region

m0 m1/2 A0 sign( ) tan 80 200 -500 + 10

Key features

BR(chi_1+ stau_1 + neutrino) = 90% (ISAJET)

BR(chi_2 0 stau_1 + neutrino) = 86%

Lots of s in the final state; very few isolated e or .

Page 34: Probing the Sevolution  of the Universe  at the LHC

All squark gluino events generated by PYTHIA (parton level);

tau abd b decays switched off.

#of events with at least one tau : 81%

# of events with one tau pair + 2b jets +missing energy

=29% ( Signal?)

Bonus: light stop (218)

.

Page 35: Probing the Sevolution  of the Universe  at the LHC

The Potential Constraints

The scalar potential in MSSM is a complicated object – function of many scalars including charged and coloured fields.

Require: no minimum for a non-zero charged or coloured field deeper than the EWSB minimum

Page 36: Probing the Sevolution  of the Universe  at the LHC

Example

Minimization Constraints on mSUGRAparameters

A.D and A. Samanta hep-ph/0406129

Upper bounds on sparticle masses

Page 37: Probing the Sevolution  of the Universe  at the LHC

What if we leave in a false vacuum with alife time larger than the age of the universe?

Page 38: Probing the Sevolution  of the Universe  at the LHC

Conclusions (mSUGRA)

•Several interesting regions of WMAP allowed parameter space are within the striking range of the LHC.

•By and large third generation sfermions lead to characteristic signatures in all regions

•Detection efficiencies- important experimental issue.

Page 39: Probing the Sevolution  of the Universe  at the LHC

• In sptite of extensive analyses there are still open questions

•Focus point region: backgrounds from tttt, ttbb,ttgg,…….. seems to be manageable; gluino mass reach?

• Increase the reach in the tau co-annihilation region (high tan ), Higgs funnel and focus point region.

•The bulk region for large A_0 has not been fully analyzed ; may lead to qualitatively new signatures.

Page 40: Probing the Sevolution  of the Universe  at the LHC

Beyond mSUGRA

• Co-annihilation with light stop• Electroweak baryogenesis - light stop once more!• Discovery at Tevatron ? • Nonuniversal scalar masses – the VLSPs revisited

Page 41: Probing the Sevolution  of the Universe  at the LHC

Coannihilation with lighter stop

Recent work C. Balazs et al in reference 1

Stop LSP mass difference < 30 GeV

Beyond mSUGRA scenario

Discovery at Tevatron?

Confirmation at LHC?

2 b-jets+ 2 LS dilepton+ missing transverse energy from gluino pairs

Production followed by gluino decays into top and stop ( Kraml and Rakhlev in ref 1)

Page 42: Probing the Sevolution  of the Universe  at the LHC

Stop Co-annihilation

Page 43: Probing the Sevolution  of the Universe  at the LHC

Baryogenesis and Light stop

EWBG needs a boson with mass ~ EW scale and strongly coupled to the Higgs boson – stop is a viable candidate.

Require

Discovery at Tevatron ?

CP Phase (EDM constraint?)

Recent analysis C. Balazs et al ref 1. (MSSM)

tt~ mm 120

Page 44: Probing the Sevolution  of the Universe  at the LHC

Stop co-annihilation (with CP Phase)

Page 45: Probing the Sevolution  of the Universe  at the LHC

Stop Search ProspectTevatron

Stop search at TevatronR. Demina et al hep-ph/9910 275 (c-tagging?,4-body decay?)

Both CDM(stop co-annihilation and EW baryogeneis via light stop?

Page 46: Probing the Sevolution  of the Universe  at the LHC

The 4-body decay of the stop

C. Boehm et al hep-Ph/9907428 : May be the dominant mode.

A strong Higgs mass bound reduces the allowed parameter space:

S. P. Das hep-ph/0512011

Page 47: Probing the Sevolution  of the Universe  at the LHC

The VLSP Scenario

• Right slepton heavier than left sleptons ( forbidden in mSUGRA; allowed in models with non-universal scalar mass)

• Large numder of e and in the final state

• Invisible decay of sneutrino and the second lightest neutralino

Many interesting signatures (Qualitatively different from the ones in mSUGRA) at LEP and Tevatron were proposed: S.Chakrabarty, AD, Asesh Datta, M. Drees, M. Guchait, B. Mukhopadhyaya and M. K. Parida.

LHC??

Page 48: Probing the Sevolution  of the Universe  at the LHC

WMAP Allowed VLSP Scenario

MICROOMEGAS

chi_1+

173.6

Thanks to Utpal Chattopadhyaya, Debottam Das and Sujoy Poddar!

Snuelec :102.0(NLSP)

Page 49: Probing the Sevolution  of the Universe  at the LHC

Decay BRs (SDECAY)

BR(~chi_20 -> ~nu_eL nu_eb) 10%

Sneutrino (NLSP)decay invisibly

Six such invisible channels

BR(~chi_20 -> ~e_L- e+) 5%

BR(~chi_20 -> ~tau_1- tau+) 10%

Lots of e and in the final state (not allowed even in the resurrected bulk of mSUGRA

Page 50: Probing the Sevolution  of the Universe  at the LHC

Can one rule out a model because of too little or too much dark matter?

Too little: May be there are non-sparticleor even non-particle dark matter

Too much: A little RPV (induced by physics at the high scale) will make theLSP cosmologically unstable but stable at colliders.

Page 51: Probing the Sevolution  of the Universe  at the LHC

•Slight departures from Msugra (not necessarily from SUGRA) may lead to qualitatively new signatures

• The VLSP scenario and other beyond mSUGRA models call for special attention;

•More acceptable naturalness parameters (S.F. King and J. P. Roberts……………) in models with non-universal scalar and/or gaugino masses?

•The very special light stop: a) mSUGRA with large A_0 (beware of potential constraints) b) stop coannihilation c) electroweak baryogenesis; discovery at Tevatron ? (Beware of 4-body decays)

Conclusions (Beyond mSUGRA)

Page 52: Probing the Sevolution  of the Universe  at the LHC
Page 53: Probing the Sevolution  of the Universe  at the LHC
Page 54: Probing the Sevolution  of the Universe  at the LHC

SIGNALS FROM GLUINO PAIR -PRODUCTION

From U. Chattopadhyay

et al hep-ph/0008228