Abstract

Motivated by dark-matter considerations in supersymmetric theories, we investigate in a fairly model-independent way the detection at the LHC of nearly degenerate gauginos with mass differences between a few GeV and about 30 GeV. Due to the degeneracy of gaugino states, the conventional leptonic signals are likely lost. We first consider the leading signal from gluino production and decay. We find that it is quite conceivable to reach a large statistical significance for the multi-jet plus missing energy signal with an integrated luminosity about 50 pb^-1 (50 fb^-1) for a gluino mass of 500 GeV (1 TeV). If gluinos are not too heavy, less than about 1.5 TeV, this channel can typically probe gaugino masses up to about 100 GeV below the gluino mass. We then study the Drell-Yan type of gaugino pair production in association with a hard QCD jet, for gaugino masses in the range of 100-150 GeV. The signal observation may be statistically feasible with about 10 fb^-1, but systematically challenging due to the lack of distinctive features for the signal distributions. By exploiting gaugino pair production through weak boson fusion, signals of large missing energy plus two forward-backward jets may be observable at a 4-6\sigma level above the large SM backgrounds with an integrated luminosity of 100-300 fb^-1. Finally, we point out that searching for additional isolated soft muons in the range p_T ~3-10 GeV in the data samples discussed above may help to enrich the signal and to control the systematics. Significant efforts are made to explore the connection between the signal kinematics and the relevant masses for the gluino and gauginos, to probe the mass scales of the superpartners, in particular the LSP dark matter.

Highlights

  • Significant efforts are made to explore the connection between the signal kinematics and the relevant masses for the gluino and gauginos, to probe the mass scales of the superpartners, in particular, the lightest supersymmetric particle dark matter

  • If supersymmetry (SUSY) is realized in nature, and the SUSY partners of the standard model (SM) particles are present at the weak scale, new colored supersymmetric particles will be copiously produced at the LHC via the SUð3Þcolor strong interaction

  • We have considered the strategies for discovering electroweak gaugino states with nearly degenerate mass at the LHC

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

If supersymmetry (SUSY) is realized in nature, and the SUSY partners of the standard model (SM) particles are present at the weak scale, new colored supersymmetric particles will be copiously produced at the LHC via the SUð3Þcolor strong interaction. The definitive confirmation of supersymmetry will require the discovery of the supersymmetric partners of the electroweak SM particles as well. The direct production of electroweak supersymmetric particles at the LHC suffers from relatively small rates, while the indirect production in decay chains is rather model dependent, rendering the missing particle identification and its property determination challenging. A further complication is that, whenever the soft SUSY breaking mass parameters are larger than weak boson mass MW, some of the charginos and neutralinos become nearly degenerate in mass, making their identification at the LHC. In the opposite case in which the gaugino masses are larger than , the LSP is mostly Higgsino, and two neutralinos and one chargino are approximately degenerate with mass differences

M2 þ tan2W M1
Model parameters
GLUINO PAIR PRODUCTION
Gaugino decays
Signal characteristics of gluino pair production
Observability of jets þ E6 T signal
Soft leptons in jets þ E6 T events
Gluino signal and SUSY mass parameters
GAUGINO PAIR PRODUCTION PLUS A JET
Monojet plus E6 T signal
Soft muon signals
GAUGINO PAIR PRODUCTION VIA WBF
21 Â 103 6:0 Â 103
Findings
SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS
Full Text
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