Broken R-Parity in the Sky and at the LHC
Jul, 201030 pages
Published in:
- JHEP 10 (2010) 061
e-Print:
- 1007.5007 [hep-ph]
Report number:
- DESY-10-068
View in:
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Abstract: (arXiv)
Supersymmetric extensions of the Standard Model with small R-parity and lepton number violating couplings are naturally consistent with primordial nucleosynthesis, thermal leptogenesis and gravitino dark matter. We consider supergravity models with universal boundary conditions at the grand unification scale, and scalar tau-lepton or bino-like neutralino as next-to-lightest superparticle (NLSP). Recent Fermi-LAT data on the isotropic diffuse gamma-ray flux yield a lower bound on the gravitino lifetime. Comparing two-body gravitino and neutralino decays we find a lower bound on a neutralino NLSP decay length, c \tau_{\chi^0_1} \gsim 30 cm. Together with gravitino and neutralino masses one obtains a microscopic determination of the Planck mass. For a stau-NLSP there exists no model-independent lower bound on the decay length. Here the strongest bound comes from the requirement that the cosmological baryon asymmetry is not washed out, which yields c \tau_{\tilde\tau_1} \gsim 4 mm. However, without fine-tuning of parameters, one finds much larger decay lengths. For typical masses, and , the discovery of a photon line with an intensity close to the Fermi-LAT limit would imply a decay length of several hundred meters, which can be measured at the LHC.- Supersymmetry Phenomenology
- decay: length
- neutralino: decay
- neutralino: NLSP
- gravitino: lifetime
- lepton number: violation
- baryon: asymmetry
- gamma ray: flux
- supergravity
- CERN LHC Coll
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