Abstract

We study the LHC phenomenology of the next-to-minimal model of gauge-mediated supersymmetry breaking (NMGMSB), both for Run I and Run II. The Higgs phenomenology of the model is consistent with observations: a 125 GeV Standard Model-like Higgs which mixes with singlet-like state of mass around 90 GeV that provides a 2$\sigma$ excess at LEP II. The model possesses regions of parameter space where a longer-lived lightest neutralino decays in the detector into a gravitino and a $b-$jet pair or a tau pair. We investigate current lower bounds on sparticle masses and the discovery potential of the model, both via conventional sparticle searches and via searches for displaced vertices. The strongest bound from searches for promptly decaying sparticles yields a lower limit on the gluino mass of 1080 GeV. An analysis of 100 fb$^{-1}$ from Run II, on the other hand, is expected to be sensitive up to 1900 GeV. The displaced vertex searches from Run I suffer from a very low signal efficiency, mainly due to the presence of $b-$quarks in the final state. We show how the displaced vertex cuts might be relaxed in order to improve signal efficiency, while simultaneous prompt objects can be used to cut down background. We find that a combined search strategy with both prompt and displaced cuts potentially has a far better sensitivity to this model than either set alone, motivating a fully fledged experimental study.

Highlights

  • Sparticle searches at the large hadron collider (LHC) have so far yielded no clear discovery

  • We study the LHC phenomenology of the nextto-minimal model of gauge-mediated supersymmetry breaking, both for Run I and Run II

  • We have examined the prospects for discovery or exclusion of the DGS-NMGMSB model

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Summary

Introduction

Sparticle searches at the large hadron collider (LHC) have so far yielded no clear discovery. One may get an impression from “simplified model searches” (where the MSSM spectrum is set to be heavy except for a few sparticles relevant for a particular search) that strongly interacting particles with multi-TeV masses are already ruled out [26] that in the DGS model one can obtain a 125 GeV standard model-like Higgs boson with stops as light as 1.1 TeV, thanks to the mixing of the Higgs with a singlet state at O(90−100) GeV which is compatible with LEP data [29] With these Higgs constraints, essentially all parameters are fixed except for the GM messenger scale which mainly controls the phenomenology of the gravitino.

Benchmark model and event generation
Prompt SUSY searches
Current bounds from Run I and early Run II searches
Future search reach of prompt searches
Searches with displaced vertices
Validation of Run I displaced vertex searches
Run I sensitivity of displaced vertex searches
TeV gluino decays to a
Improving the sensitivity of displaced vertex searches
Recommendations for displaced vertex searches at 13 TeV
Findings
Summary
Full Text
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