4.7 Article

Stop coannihilation in the CMSSM and SubGUT models

Journal

EUROPEAN PHYSICAL JOURNAL C
Volume 78, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1140/epjc/s10052-018-5831-z

Keywords

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Funding

  1. STFC (UK) [ST/L000326/1]
  2. Estonian Research Council via a Mobilitas Pluss Grant
  3. World Premier International Research Center Initiative (WPI), MEXT, Japan
  4. DOE at the University of Minnesota [DE-SC0011842]
  5. KAKENHI [JP26104009]
  6. STFC [ST/P000258/1] Funding Source: UKRI
  7. National Research Foundation of Korea [PG057602] Funding Source: Korea Institute of Science & Technology Information (KISTI), National Science & Technology Information Service (NTIS)

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Stop coannihilation may bring the relic density of heavy supersymmetric dark matter particles into the range allowed by cosmology. The efficiency of this process is enhanced by stop-antistop annihilations into the longitudinal (Goldstone) modes of the W and Z bosons, as well as by Sommerfeld enhancement of stop annihilations and the effects of bound states. Since the couplings of the stops to the Goldstone modes are proportional to the trilinear soft supersymmetry-breaking A-terms, these annihilations are enhanced when the A-terms are large. However, the Higgs mass may be reduced below the measured value if the A-terms are too large. Unfortunately, the interpretation of this constraint on the stop coannihilation strip is clouded by differences between the available Higgs mass calculators. For our study, we use as our default calculator FeynHiggs 2.13.0, the most recent publicly available version of this code. Exploring the CMSSM parameter space, we find that along the stop coannihilation strip the masses of the stops are severely split by the large A-terms. This suppresses the Higgs mass drastically for mu and A(0) > 0, whilst the extent of the stop coannihilation strip is limited for A(0) < 0 and either sign of mu. However, in sub-GUT models, reduced renormalization-group running mitigates the effect of the large A-terms, allowing larger LSP masses to be consistent with the Higgs mass calculation. We give examples where the dark matter particle mass may reach greater than or similar to 8 TeV.

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