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The supersymmetric little hierarchy problem and possible solutions - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

The supersymmetric little hierarchy problem and possible solutions Stephen P . Martin Northern Illinois University PHENO 2010 May 11, 2010 Based in part on 0910.2732 , and work to appear with James Younkin. Supersymmetry is Too Big To Fail:


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The supersymmetric little hierarchy problem and possible solutions

Stephen P . Martin Northern Illinois University PHENO 2010 May 11, 2010

Based in part on 0910.2732, and work to appear with James Younkin.

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Supersymmetry is Too Big To Fail:

  • A solution to the big hierarchy problem of MPlanck/MW
  • A dark matter candidate
  • Easily satisfies oblique precision electroweak constraints
  • Gauge coupling unification

However, the non-discovery of the lightest Higgs boson h0 at LEP2 is cause for doubt. The supersymmetric little hierarchy problem is the rational fear that some percent-level fine-tuning is needed to explain how h0 evades the LEP2 bounds (Mh > 114 GeV in most supersymmetric models).

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What is fine tuning?

“I shall not today attempt further to define [it]... and perhaps I could never succeed in intelligibly doing so. But I know it when I see it...” U.S. Supreme Court Justice Potter Stewart concurrence in Jacobellis v. Ohio (1964).

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Like pornography, fine-tuning is impossible to define. There is no such thing as an objective measure on the parameter space of SUSY, or any other theory. Only one set of parameters, at most, is correct! But, like Potter Stewart, we usually know it when we see it. So, even lacking the possibility of a real definition, let us proceed.

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SUSY prediction for lightest Higgs mass:

M 2

h = m2 Z cos2(2β) +

3 4π2y2

t m4 t sin2β ln

t1m˜ t2

m2

t

  • Top squarks are spin-0 partners of top quark: ˜

t1, ˜ t2. tan β = vu/vd = ratio of Higgs VEVs.

To evade discovery at LEP2, need sin β ≈ 1 and (naively)

√m˜

t1m˜ t2 >

∼ 700 GeV.

The logarithm apparently must be >

∼ 3.

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SLIDE 6

Meanwhile, the condition for Electroweak Symmetry Breaking is:

m2

Z

= −2

  • |µ|2 + m2

Hu

  • + small loop corrections + O(1/ tan2β).

Here |µ|2 is a SUSY-preserving Higgs squared mass,

m2

Hu is a (negative) SUSY-violating Higgs scalar squared mass.

The problem: typical models for SUSY breaking imply that −m2

Hu is

comparable to m˜

t1m˜ t2 >

∼ (700 GeV)2. If so, then required

cancellation is of order 1%, or worse.

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SLIDE 7

Things may not be so bad, for at least four reasons:

  • The previous formula for Mh is too simplistic.

Top-squark mixing can raise Mh dramatically.

  • The previous formula for Mh changes in extensions of the

minimal SUSY model.

  • It isn’t obvious how −m2

Hu is related to m˜ t1m˜ t2.

They are related by SUSY breaking, but in different ways in different models.

  • Maybe h0 cleverly hid from LEP2, and Mh0 really is significantly

less than 114 GeV. (See e.g. Gunion and Dermisek.)

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Much work on the SUSY Little Hierarchy Problem has been done in the last decade. I will not attempt a proper survey today. But, just in the PHENO10 parallel sessions, work directly motivated

  • r informed by it includes J. Zurita, A. de la Puente, J.P

. Olson, P . Draper, R. Dermisek, J. Younkin.

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Possible Solution #1: Large stop mixing.

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Include effects of a stop mixing angle with (cosine, sine) = c˜

t, s˜ t :

M 2

h = m2 Z + 3y2 t

4π2 m2

t

  • ln

t1m˜ t2

m2

t

  • + c2

˜ ts2 ˜ t

m2

t

(m2

˜ t2 − m2 ˜ t1) ln

  • m2

˜ t2

m2

˜ t1

  • +c4

˜ ts4 ˜ t

m4

t

  • (m2

˜ t2 − m2 ˜ t1)2 − 1

2(m4

˜ t2 − m4 ˜ t1) ln

m2

˜ t2

m2

˜ t1

  • .

The Blue term is positive definite. The Red term is negative definite. Maximizing with respect to the stop mixing angle, one can show: M 2

h < m2 Z + 3y2 t

4π2 m2

t

  • ln
  • m2

˜ t2/m2 t

  • + 3
  • .

The upper bound is the “maximal mixing” scenario. Unfortunately, in many specific classes of models of SUSY breaking, the mixing angle is not large enough.

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Possible Solution #2: Non-universal gaugino masses.

(More generally, abandon mSUGRA.)

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In mSUGRA, there are only 5 new parameters at MU = 2 × 1016 GeV:

M1/2 =

universal gaugino mass

m0 =

universal scalar mass

A0 =

universal (scalar)3 coupling

tan β = Hu/Hd

Arg(µ) What if we allow the bino, wino, and gluino masses M1, M2, M3 to be distinct at MU ?

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The large value of µ in mSUGRA is mostly the gluino’s fault. (G. Kane and S. King, hep-ph/9810374)

−m2

Hu

= 1.92M 2

3 + 0.16M2M3 − 0.21M 2 2

+ many terms with tiny coefficients

The parameters on the right side are at MU, left side is at the TeV scale after RG running. If one takes a smaller gluino mass at MU, say M3/M2 ∼ 1/3, then −m2

Hu will be much smaller.

As a result, |µ|2 will also be very small, solving the little hierarchy problem.

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An example:

F = order parameter that breaks SUSY.

Suppose F transforms in a linear combination of the singlet and the adjoint of the SU(5) that contains SU(3)c × SU(2)L × U(1)Y . Then:

M1 = m1/2(cos θ24 + sin θ24) M2 = m1/2(cos θ24 + 3 sin θ24) M3 = m1/2(cos θ24 − 2 sin θ24)

Note sin θ24 = 0 is usual mSUGRA.

sin θ24 > ∼ 0.2 − → small M3/M2, “Compressed SUSY”, solution to

little hierarchy problem.

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Map of µ for varying sin θ24, m0; fixed M1 = 500 GeV, tan β = 10.

  • 1.0
  • 0.8
  • 0.6
  • 0.4
  • 0.2
0.0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 10 2 10 3 10 4 m [GeV] sin 24

J.Younkin Black: µ < 300 GeV, Brown: 300 < µ < 400, Red: 400 < µ < 500, etc. For much more, see Younkin’s talk in SUSY3 parallel session.

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Possible solution # 3: Extend minimal SUSY.

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The reason why M 2

h ∼ m2 Z at tree-level is because the Higgs

quartic coupling is small: (g2 + g′2)/8. Many candidate models work by adding to this coupling. For example, the Next-to-Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model extends the minimal model with a singlet S. The superpotential interaction is

W = λSHuHd,

and leads to

∆M 2

h = m2 Z cos2(2β) + λ2v2 sin2(2β).

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Possible Solution #4: Extend minimal SUSY more radically.

I’ll spend the remainder of my time on this.

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Extend MSSM with new vectorlike matter = fields in real representation of unbroken gauge group. In general, new physics is highly constrained by precision electroweak observables (Peskin-Takeuchi S,T parameters): New particles

W , Z, γ

For vectorlike matter, contributions to S, T decouble like 1/M 2. In minimal SUSY, the new fermions (gauginos and Higgsinos) are vectorlike. Why not add more of them?

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If the vectorlike fermions also have large Yukawa couplings, in addition to their bare masses, then they will contribute to M 2

h.

For example, new vectorlike quarks contribute to M 2

h through these

diagrams:

q′ h0 h0

  • q ′
  • q ′

h0

These contributions do not decouple for large Mq′, as long as there is a hierarchy of squark to quark masses, M˜

q′/Mq′.

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Generic structure of new extra vectorlike matter superfields:

Φ, Φ = SU(2)L doublets (vectorlike) φ, φ = SU(2)L

singlets (vectorlike) Superpotential:

W = MΦΦΦ + Mφφφ + kHuΦφ

Yukawa coupling = k, and ∆m2

h0 ∝ k4v2.

So want k as large as possible = IR quasi-fixed point of renormalization group equations.

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Important earlier work on this subject: Moroi and Okada 1992, Babu, Gogoladze, and Kolda 2004, Babu, Gogoladze, Rehman, Shafi 2008. But, corrections to the Peskin-Takeuchi T parameter were

  • verestimated by a factor of about 4. So much less constrained than

previously thought! (SPM, 2009) Want to maintain or improve successes of minimal SUSY:

  • Perturbative gauge coupling unification
  • No unconfined fractional charges
  • Avoid fine tuning: new particles not too heavy.
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SLIDE 23

Building block superfields, under SU(3)C × SU(2)L × U(1)Y : Q, Q : (3, 2, 1 6), (3, 2, −1 6) U, U : (3, 1, 2 3), (3, 1, −2 3) D, D : (3, 1, −1 3), (3, 1, 1 3) L, L : (1, 2, −1 2), (1, 2, 1 2) E, E : (1, 1, −1), (1, 1, 1) N : (1, 1, 0)

(singlet)

T : (1, 3, 0)

(electroweak triplet)

O : (8, 1, 0)

(color octet))

All others give unconfined fractional charges, or will ruin perturbative unification.

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Models with perturbative unification:

(LND)n :

(L, L, D, D, N, N) × n [5 + 5 of SU(5), n = 1, 2, 3]

QUE :

Q, Q, U, U, E, E [10 + 10 of SU(5)]

QDEE :

Q, Q, D, D, E, E, E, E

OTLEE :

O, T, L, L, E, E, E, E [adjoint of SU(3)c × SU(3)L × SU(3)R] . . . (There are 5 more.) The OTLEE model has a qualitatively different feature than first three:

L = kHuTL = (Higgs doublet)(triplet)(doublet) Yukawa coupling

Not discussed today; see forthcoming paper for details.

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Gauge couplings still unify above 1016 GeV, but at stronger coupling. Three-loop running:

2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16

Log10(Q/GeV)

10 20 30 40 50 60

α

  • 1

MSSM MSSM + 5 + 5 MSSM + 10 + 10 U(1) SU(2) SU(3) _

_

Black = MSSM Blue = LND Model Red = QUE Model (QDEE, OTLEE similar) All new particle thresholds taken at Q = 600 GeV. Extra fields contribute equally to the three beta functions at 1 loop.

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An aside: why not a complete 4th vector-like family?

Explored by BGRS2008, and more recently in an interesting paper by Graham, Ismail, Saraswat and Rajendran 0910.2732 based on a 1-loop analysis. However, taking into account higher-loop effects, perturbative unification fails (unless new particle masses >

∼ 2.5 TeV):

2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16

Log10(Q/GeV)

10 20 30 40 50 60

α

  • 1

1 loop RGEs 2 loop RGEs 3 loop RGEs U(1) SU(2) SU(3)

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QUE Model:

W = MQQQ + MUUU + kHuQU + MEEE

New fermions: t′, t′′, b′, τ ′ New scalars:

˜ t′

1,2,3,4, ˜

b′

1,2, ˜

τ ′

1,2

The Yukawa coupling k has an IR quasi-fixed point at k ≈ 1.05. Soft susy-breaking Lagrangian:

−Lsoft = akHuQU + m2

Q|Q|2 + . . .

The corrections to ∆m2

h depend strongly on ak, which also has a

strongly attractive fixed point.

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Infrared-stable fixed point at k = 1.05 in the QUE model:

2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16

Log10(Q/GeV)

1 2 3 4

kU

This large value is natural in the sense that many inputs at GUT scale end up there. The QDEE model behaves very similarly.

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Near fixed point for k, there is also a strong focusing behavior for

Ak = ak/k:

2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16

Log10(Q/GeV)

  • 3
  • 2
  • 1

1 2 3

Ak/m1/2

For almost every high-scale boundary condition,

−0.5 < ∼ Ak/m1/2 < ∼ −0.3.

This is much closer to the “No Mixing” scenario than to “Maximal Mixing”.

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Higgs mass corrections near the fixed point with k = 1.05 in the QUE model, as a function of average scalar mass MS:

600 800 1000 1200 1400 1600

MS [GeV]

5 10 15 20 25

∆mh [GeV]

MF = 400 GeV MF = 600 GeV MF = 800 GeV

Upper lines: Ak = −0.5m1/2 Lower lines: Ak = −0.3m1/2 The most dramatic dependence is on MS/MF .

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SLIDE 31

∆S, ∆T for typical QUE model with varying M ≡ MQ = MU

and m1/2 = 600 GeV.

  • 0.2
  • 0.1

0.1 0.2 0.3

∆S

  • 0.2
  • 0.1

0.1 0.2 0.3

∆T

95% 68%

∆S = ∆T = 0 defined

here by Standard Model with mt = 173.1 GeV,

Mh = 115 GeV. × = best fit to Z-pole

data. Black dots are mt′

1 = 275, 300, 350, 400, 500, 700, 1000 GeV and ∞.

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General comments on collider phenomenology:

  • Largest production cross-section involves the lightest new quark:

always t′ for QUE Model and b′ for QDEE Model.

  • New extra particles and sparticles probably won’t appear in

cascade decay of MSSM superpartners (notably the gluino), due to kinematic prohibition or suppression.

  • Lightest new fermions can only decay by mixing with Standard

Model fermions. If this is very small, the lightest new fermions could be long-lived on collider scales, yielding charged massive particles or displaced vertices.

  • Mixing with Standard Model fermions is highly constrained (no

GIM mechanism) except for the third family, so decays to t, b are most likely case.

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SLIDE 33

Limits from Tevatron (CDF)

  • mt′ > 335 GeV if BR(t′ → Wq) is 100%.

Based on lepton + jets + Emiss

T

search with 4.6 fb−1.

CDF note 10110. (Slight excess. Expected limit was mt′ > 372 GeV.)

  • mb′ > 338 GeV if BR(b′ → Wt) is 100%.

Based on same-charge dilepton search with 2.7 fb−1.

  • mb′ > 268 GeV if BR(b′ → Zb) is 100%.

Based on 1.06 fb−1.

  • mb′ > 295 GeV if BR(b′ → Wt, Zb, hb) = (0.5, 0.25, 0.25).

Based on dilepton search with 1.2 fb−1.

  • mq′ >

∼ 350 GeV if q′ long-lived

Based on time-of-flight measurement with 1.06 fb−1.

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How does the t′ decay in QUE Model? Depends on the form of the mixing term between the extra quarks and the Standard Model ones (assumed to be t, b). Possible terms are:

  • L = HdQb

Implies charged-current (“W-philic”) decays, with

BR(t′ → bW, tZ, th) = (1, 0, 0).

  • L = HuQt

Implies dominantly neutral current (“W-phobic”) decays, with

BR(t′ → bW, tZ, th) = (0, 0.5, 0.5) in the high mass limit.

  • L = Hu

t b

  • U

Implies “democratic” decays, with

BR(t′ → bW, tZ, th) = (0.5, 0.25, 0.25) in the high mass limit.

Linear combinations of these are also possible.

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Mass effects are important in “W-phobic” and “democratic” cases. Branching ratios for t′ in QUE model: “democratic” “W-phobic”

300 400 500 600 700 800

mt’ [GeV]

0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1

t’ Branching Ratios

ht Wb Zt

300 400 500 600 700 800

mt’ [GeV]

0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1

t’ Branching Ratios

ht Wb Zt

Note CDF search assumes large BR(t′ → Wq), but this is not inevitable.

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SLIDE 36

Can Tevatron put bounds on t′ → tZ and/or t′ → th ? (I strongly suspect so.)

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SLIDE 37

LHC signals depend on the mixing of the new quarks with the Standard Model ones. For example, if the W decays dominate: In the QUE Model, the t′ signature is the same as for ordinary t, but with a larger mass: pp → t′t′ → W +bW −b. In the QDEE Model, there could be a same-sign dilepton signal from pp → b′b′ → W −tW +t → W +W +W −W −bb → ℓ+ℓ+bbjjjj + Emiss

T

Many more possibilities!

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SLIDE 38

In both QUE and QDEE Models, gauge coupling unification demands a τ ′ whose branching ratios depend only on its mass:

100 200 300 400 500 600

mτ’

0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1

τ’ Branching Ratios

hτ Wν Zτ

For large mτ ′, the Goldstone equivalence theorem implies BR(Wν) : BR(Zτ) : BR(hτ) = 2 : 1 : 1. Can Tevatron place any bound on such a τ ′ ?

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Outlook The Supersymmetric Little Hierarchy Problem is a minor crisis. Physics progress thrives on crisis! We should regard it as an opportunity, to learn and make bold

  • predictions. The models I’ve talked about are a small fraction of

possible solutions. Explore your own ideas!