A new approach for detecting compressed bino/wino at the LHC
Abstract
In some supersymmetric models like split supersymmetry or models with non-universal gaugino mass, bino (LSP) and winos (NLSP) may have rather small mass splitting in order to provide the correct dark matter relic density through bino/wino co-annihilation. Such a scenario with the compressed bino/wino is difficult to explore at the LHC. In this work we propose to probe this scenario from $pp \to j \tilde{\chi}^0_2 \tilde{\chi}^\pm_1$ followed by $\tilde{\chi}^0_2 \to \gamma \tilde{\chi}^0_1$ and $\tilde{\chi}^\pm_1 \to W^{*}\tilde{\chi}^0_1\to \ell^\pm \nu \tilde{\chi}^0_1$ (this method is also applicable to the compressed bino/higgsino scenario). Through a detailed Monte Carlo simulation for both the signal and the backgrounds, we find that for a mass splitting $\Delta M \sim 5-15$ GeV between bino (LSP) and wino (NLSP), the 14 TeV LHC with luminosity of 500$fb^{-1}$ can probe the wino up to 150 GeV (the sensitivity can reach $5\sigma$ for $\Delta M = 5$ GeV and $2\sigma$ for $\Delta M = 15$ GeV). We also investigate the dark matter detection sensitivities for this scenario and find that the planned XENON-1T(2017) cannot fully cover the parameter space with wino below 150 GeV allowed by relic density and the LUX limits.
- Publication:
-
arXiv e-prints
- Pub Date:
- September 2014
- DOI:
- 10.48550/arXiv.1409.4533
- arXiv:
- arXiv:1409.4533
- Bibcode:
- 2014arXiv1409.4533H
- Keywords:
-
- High Energy Physics - Phenomenology;
- High Energy Physics - Experiment
- E-Print:
- 14 pages, 4 figures