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Prospects for SUSY at ATLAS and CMS

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Title: Prospects for SUSY at ATLAS and CMS


1
Supersymmetryat ATLAS
Dan Tovey University of Sheffield
2
ATLAS
3
(No Transcript)
4
SUSY _at_ ATLAS
  • Many motivations for low-scale SUSY
  • Gauge hierarchy problem
  • Higgs mass
  • Coupling constant unification
  • Dark Matter candidate
  • Focus here on R-Parity Conserving models
  • Dark Matter Candidate ? ETmiss signature
  • NB ETmiss signature valid for any DM candidate
    (not just SUSY)


c01
MET

c01
5
ATLAS SUSY Strategy
  • SUSY studies at ATLAS will proceed in three
    stages
  • SUSY Discovery phase
  • Inclusive Studies
  • comparison of significance in inclusive channels,
  • measurement of SUSY Mass Scale.
  • Exclusive studies
  • model-dependent interpretation (e.g. mSUGRA DM),
  • less model-dependent DM,
  • universalities / flavour physics,
  • spin measurement (is it SUSY?),
  • .

6
  • Stage 1
  • SUSY Discovery

7
SUSY Signatures
  • Q What do we expect SUSY events _at_ LHC to look
    like?
  • A Look at typical decay chain
  • Strongly interacting sparticles (squarks,
    gluinos) dominate production.
  • Heavier than sleptons, gauginos etc. g cascade
    decays to LSP.
  • Long decay chains and large mass differences
    between SUSY states
  • Many high pT objects observed (leptons, jets,
    b-jets).
  • If R-Parity conserved LSP (lightest neutralino in
    mSUGRA) stable and sparticles pair produced.
  • Large ETmiss signature (c.f. Wgln).
  • Closest equivalent SM signature tgWb.

8
Inclusive Searches
  • Use 'golden' Jets n leptons ETmiss discovery
    channel.
  • Map statistical discovery reach in mSUGRA m0-m1/2
    parameter space.
  • Sensitivity only weakly dependent on A0, tan(b)
    and sign(m).
  • Syst. stat. reach harder to assess focus of
    current future work.

5s
5s
ATLAS
ATLAS
9
Monte Carlo Studies
  • Monte Carlo background estimates subject to
    significant systematics
  • Original studies used Parton Shower
  • Recent studies use ALPGEN MPFS generator MLM
    matching to PS
  • Re-assessment of significances

Jets ETmiss 0 leptons
MeffSpTi ETmiss
ATLAS
10 fb-1
MeffSpTi ETmiss
10
Background Estimation
  • Inclusive signature jets n leptons ETmiss
  • Main backgrounds
  • Z n jets
  • W n jets
  • QCD
  • ttbar
  • Greatest discrimination power from ETmiss
    (R-Parity conserving models)
  • Generic approach to background estimation
  • Select background calibration samples (control
    region)
  • Extrapolate into high ETmiss signal region.
  • Used by CDF / D0
  • Extrapolation is non-trivial.
  • Must find variables uncorrelated with ETmiss
  • Several approaches being developed.

One lepton mode BG _at_ 1fb-1
  • Blue tt(?lnln)
  • Green tt(?lnqq)
  • Red w
  • Black sum BG
  • Pink SU3

Preliminary
ATLAS
MeffSpTi ETmiss
Effective mass (GeV)
Jets ETmiss 1 lepton
10 fb-1
MeffSpTi ETmiss
11
W/ZJets Background
  • Z g nn n jets, W g ln n jets, W g tn (n-1)
    jets (t fakes jet)
  • Estimate from Z g ll- n jets (e or m)
  • Tag leptonic Z and use to validate MC / estimate
    ETmiss from pT(Z) pT(l)
  • Alternatively tag W g ln n jets and replace
    lepton with n (0l)
  • higher stats
  • biased by presence of SUSY

(Z?ll)
ATLAS
Preliminary
(W?ln)
ATLAS
Preliminary
12
Top Background
  • Jets ETmiss 1 lepton cut hard on mT(ETmiss,
    l)
  • Rejects bulk of ttbar (semi-leptonic decays), W g
    ln n jets
  • Remaining background mostly fully leptonic top
    decays (tt?bblnln, tt?bbtnln, tt?bbtntn) with one
    top missed (e.g. hadronic tau)

Type of Event Number of Events
Electron-Electron 67
Muon-Muon 80
Tau-Tau 14
Electron-Muon 152
Electron-Tau 100
Muon-Tau 109
Electron-Hadron 77
Muon-Hadron 174
Tau-Hadron 7
ATLAS
Preliminary
Edge at W Mass
  • tt(?lnln)
  • tt(?lnqq)
  • wjet
  • sum of all BG
  • Pink SU3

13
Top Background
Control region
Signal region
Signal region
ATLAS
ATLAS
Preliminary
Preliminary
Missing ET (GeV)
Transverse Mass (GeV)
Control region
ATLAS
  • One possibility ? use mT(W)
  • Divide mT into signal region control region
    (mTlt100GeV)
  • Use shape of control distribution for ETmiss or
    Effective Mass
  • normalization factor determined in the low ETmiss
    region (100 - 200GeV)

Preliminary
  • tt(?lnln)
  • tt(?lnqq)
  • w
  • sum BG
  • SU3

Missing ET (GeV)
normalization region
14
mT Method
_at_1fb-1
_at_1fb-1
real BG estimated BG
real BG estimated BG
gt300GeV 9.51.1 8.60.6
gt800GeV 24.81.6 22.00.9
ATLAS
ATLAS
Preliminary
Preliminary
MeffSpTi ETmiss
Effective Mass (GeV)
Missing ET (GeV)
With SU3 signal
  • With cut mT gt 100 GeV, BG well reproduced in
    absence of SUSY signal (statistical error 10)
  • With SUSY signal estimated BG increased by factor
    2.5.
  • Rejection of SUSY contamination next issue

gt800GeV 24.81.6 60.82.5
ATLAS
Preliminary
Effective Mass (GeV)
15
QCD Background
  • Two main sources
  • fake ETmiss (gaps in acceptance, dead/hot cells,
    non-gaussian tails etc.)
  • real ETmiss (neutrinos from b/c quark decays)
  • Much harder with MC simulations require
    detailed understanding of detector performance
  • Strategy
  • Initially choose channels which minimise
    contribution until well understood (e.g. jets
    ETmiss 1l)
  • Reject events where fake ETmiss likely beam-gas
    and machine background, bad primary vertex, hot
    cells, CR muons, ETmiss phi correlations (jet
    fluctuations), jets pointing at regions of poor
    response
  • Cut hard to minimise contribution to background
    (at expense of stats).
  • Estimate background using data

Pythia dijets
SUSY SU3
16
QCD Background
  • Work in Progress several ideas under study
  • Step 1 Measure jet smearing function from data
  • Select events ETmiss gt 100 GeV, Df(ETmiss, jet)
    lt 0.1
  • Estimate pT of jet closest to EtMiss as
  • pTtrue-est pTjet ETMiss
  • Step 2 Smear low ETmiss multijet events with
    measured smearing function

fluctuating jet
Njets gt 4, pT(j1,j2) gt100GeV, pT(j3,j4) gt 50GeV
22pb-1
ATLAS
ATLAS
Preliminary
Preliminary
All QCD Z?nn SU3 Estimate (QCD)?
ETmiss
17
  • Stage 2
  • Inclusive Studies

18
Inclusive Studies
  • First indication of mSUGRA parameters from
    inclusive channels
  • Compare significance in jets ETmiss n leptons
    channels
  • Detailed measurements from exclusive channels
    when accessible.
  • Consider here two specific example points studied
    previously

ATLAS
19
Inclusive Studies
  • First SUSY parameter to be measured may be mass
    scale
  • Defined as weighted mean of masses of initial
    sparticles.
  • Calculate distribution of 'effective mass'
    variable defined as scalar sum of masses of all
    jets (or four hardest) and ETmiss
  • MeffSpTi ETmiss.
  • Distribution peaked at twice SUSY mass scale
    for signal events.
  • Pseudo 'model-independent' measurement.
  • Typical measurement error (syststat) 10 for
    mSUGRA models for 10 fb-1 (PS).

Jets ETmiss 0 leptons
ATLAS
10 fb-1
Jets ETmiss 1 lepton
20
  • Stage 3
  • Exclusive studies

21
Exclusive Studies
  • With more data will attempt to measure weak scale
    SUSY parameters (masses etc.) using exclusive
    channels.
  • Different philosophy to TeV Run II (better S/B,
    longer decay chains) g aim to use
    model-independent measures.
  • Two neutral LSPs escape from each event
  • Impossible to measure mass of each sparticle
    using one channel alone
  • Use kinematic end-points to measure combinations
    of masses.
  • Old technique used many times before (n mass from
    b decay spectrum, W (transverse) mass in Wgln).
  • Difference here is we don't know mass of neutral
    final state particles.

22
Dilepton Edge Measurements
  • When kinematically accessible c02 can undergo
    sequential two-body decay to c01 via a
    right-slepton (e.g. LHC Point 5).
  • Results in sharp OS SF dilepton invariant mass
    edge sensitive to combination of masses of
    sparticles.
  • Can perform SM SUSY background subtraction
    using OF distribution
  • ee- mm- - em- - me-
  • Position of edge measured with precision 0.5
  • (30 fb-1).


  • m0 100 GeV
  • m1/2 300 GeV
  • A0 -300 GeV
  • tan(b) 6
  • sgn(m) 1

ee- mm- - em- - me-
ee- mm-
Point 5
ATLAS
ATLAS
30 fb-1 atlfast
5 fb-1 SU3
Physics TDR
23
Measurements With Squarks
  • Dilepton edge starting point for reconstruction
    of decay chain.
  • Make invariant mass combinations of leptons and
    jets.
  • Gives multiple constraints on combinations of
    four masses.
  • Sensitivity to individual sparticle masses.

bbq edge
llq threshold
1 error (100 fb-1)
2 error (100 fb-1)
TDR, Point 5
TDR, Point 5
TDR, Point 5
TDR, Point 5
ATLAS
ATLAS
ATLAS
ATLAS
24
Model-Independent Masses
  • Combine measurements from edges from different
    jet/lepton combinations to obtain
    model-independent mass measurements.



c01
lR
ATLAS
ATLAS
Mass (GeV)
Mass (GeV)


c02
qL
ATLAS
ATLAS
LHCC Point 5
Mass (GeV)
Mass (GeV)
25
Measuring Model Parameters
  • Alternative use for SUSY observables (invariant
    mass end-points, thresholds etc.).
  • Here assume mSUGRA/CMSSM model and perform global
    fit of model parameters to observables
  • So far mostly private codes but e.g. SFITTER,
    FITTINO now on the market
  • c.f. global EW fits at LEP, ZFITTER, TOPAZ0 etc.

26
Dark Matter Parameters
  • Can use parameter measurements for many purposes,
    e.g. estimate LSP Dark Matter properties (e.g.
    for 300 fb-1, SPS1a)
  • Wch2 0.1921 ? 0.0053
  • log10(scp/pb) -8.17 ? 0.04

Baer et al. hep-ph/0305191
LHC Point 5 gt5s error (300 fb-1)
SPS1a gt5s error (300 fb-1)
Micromegas 1.1 (Belanger et al.) ISASUGRA 7.69
DarkSUSY 3.14.02 (Gondolo et al.) ISASUGRA 7.69
scp10-11 pb
scp10-10 pb
Wch2
scp
scp10-9 pb
300 fb-1
300 fb-1
No REWSB
LEP 2
ATLAS
ATLAS
27
Target Models
  • SUSY (e.g. mSUGRA) parameter space strongly
    constrained by cosmology (e.g. WMAP satellite)
    data.

mSUGRA A00, tan(b) 10, mgt0
Slepton Co-annihilation region LSP pure Bino.
Small slepton-LSP mass difference makes
measurements difficult.
Ellis et al. hep-ph/0303043
Disfavoured by BR (b ? s?) (3.2 ? 0.5) ?
10-4 (CLEO, BELLE)
'Bulk' region t-channel slepton exchange - LSP
mostly Bino. 'Bread and Butter' region for LHC
Expts.
Also 'rapid annihilation funnel' at Higgs pole at
high tan(b), stop co-annihilation region at large
A0
0.094 ? ? ? h2 ? 0.129 (WMAP)
28
Coannihilation Signatures
  • Small slepton-neutralino mass difference gives
    soft leptons
  • Low electron/muon/tau energy thresholds crucial.
  • Study point chosen within region
  • m070 GeV m1/2350 GeV A00 tanß10 µgt0
  • Decays of c02 to both lL and lR kinematically
    allowed.
  • Double dilepton invariant mass edge structure
  • Edges expected at 57 / 101 GeV
  • Stau channels enhanced (tanb)
  • Soft tau signatures
  • Edge expected at 79 GeV
  • Less clear due to poor tau visible energy
    resolution.
  • ETmissgt300 GeV
  • 2 OSSF leptons PTgt10 GeV
  • gt1 jet with PTgt150 GeV
  • OSSF-OSOF subtraction applied

100 fb-1
ATLAS
Preliminary


  • ETmissgt300 GeV
  • 1 tau PTgt40 GeV1 tau PTlt25 GeV
  • gt1 jet with PTgt100 GeV
  • SS tau subtraction

100 fb-1
ATLAS
Preliminary
29
Focus Point Signatures
  • Large m0 ? sfermions are heavy
  • Most useful signatures from heavy neutralino
    decay
  • Study point chosen within focus point region
  • m03550 GeV m1/2300 GeV A00 tanß10 µgt0
  • Direct three-body decays c0n ? c01 ll
  • Edges give m(c0n)-m(c01) flavour subtraction
    applied





M mAmB m mA-mB
Parameter Without cuts Exp. value
M1 6892 103.35
M2-M1 57.71.0 57.03
M3-M1 77.61.0 76.41
30
Dark Matter in the MSSM
  • Can relax mSUGRA constraints to obtain more
    model-independent relic density estimate.
  • Much harder needs more measurements
  • Not sufficient to measure relevant (co-)
    annihilation channels must exclude all
    irrelevant ones also
  • Stau, higgs, stop masses/mixings important as
    well as gaugino/higgsino parameters

Nojiri et al., JHEP 0603 (2006) 063
s(Wch2) vs s(mtt)
Wch2
Wch2
s(mtt)5 GeV
s(mtt)0.5 GeV
300 fb-1
300 fb-1
SPA point
31
Heavy Gaugino Measurements
  • Potentially possible to identify dilepton edges
    from decays of heavy gauginos.
  • Requires high stats.
  • Crucial input to reconstruction of MSSM
    neutralino mass matrix (independent of SUSY
    breaking scenario).

ATLAS
SPS1a
ATLAS
ATLAS
ATLAS
100 fb-1
100 fb-1
100 fb-1
SPS1a
32
SUSY Spin Measurement
  • Q How do we know that a SUSY signal is really
    due to SUSY?
  • Other models (e.g. UED) can mimic SUSY mass
    spectrum
  • A Measure spin of new particles.
  • One proposal use standard two-body slepton
    decay chain
  • charge asymmetry of lq pairs measures spin of c02
  • relies on valence quark contribution to pdf of
    proton (C asymmetry)
  • shape of dilepton invariant mass spectrum
    measures slepton spin


Point 5
ATLAS
150 fb -1
mlq
spin-0flat
150 fb -1
ATLAS
33
Supersummary
  • The LHC will be THE PLACE to search for, and
    hopefully study, SUSY from next year onwards at
    colliders (at least until ILC).
  • SUSY searches (preparations) will commence on Day
    1 of LHC operation.
  • Many studies of exclusive channels already
    performed.
  • Lots of input from both theorists (new ideas) and
    experimentalists (new techniques).
  • Big challenge for discovery will be understanding
    systematics.
  • Big effort now to understand how to exploit first
    data in timely fashion

34
  • BACK-UP SLIDES

35
Supersymmetry
  • Supersymmetry (SUSY) fundamental continuous
    symmetry connecting fermions and bosons
  • QaFgt Bgt, QaBgt Fgt
  • Qa,Qb-2gmabpm generators obey
    anti-commutation relations with 4-mom
  • Connection to space-time symmetry
  • SUSY stabilises Higgs mass against loop
    corrections (gauge hierarchy/fine-tuning problem)
  • Leads to Higgs mass 135 GeV
  • Good agreement with LEP constraints from EW
    global fits
  • SUSY modifies running of SM gauge couplings just
    enough to give Grand Unification at single scale.

LEPEWWG Winter 2006
mHlt207 GeV (95CL)
36
SUSY Spectrum
  • SUSY gives rise to partners of SM states with
    opposite spin-statistics but otherwise same
    Quantum Numbers.
  • Expect SUSY partners to have same masses as SM
    states
  • Not observed (despite best efforts!)
  • SUSY must be a broken symmetry at low energy
  • Higgs sector also expanded

h
ne
e
d
u
nm
m
s
c
nt
t
b
t
G
37
SUSY Dark Matter
  • R-Parity Rp (-1)3B2SL
  • Conservation of Rp (motivated e.g. by string
    models) attractive
  • e.g. protects proton from rapid decay via SUSY
    states
  • Causes Lightest SUSY Particle (LSP) to be
    absolutely stable
  • LSP neutral/weakly interacting to escape
    astroparticle bounds on anomalous heavy elements.
  • Naturally provides solution to dark matter
    problem
  • R-Parity violating models still possible ? not
    covered here.

38
SUSY _at_ ATLAS
  • LHC will be a 14 TeV proton-proton collider
    located inside the LEP tunnel at CERN.
  • Luminosity goals
  • 10 fb-1 / year (first 3 years)
  • 100 fb-1/year (subsequently).
  • First data this year!
  • Higgs SUSY main goals.
  • Much preparatory work carried out historically by
    ATLAS
  • Summarised in Detector and Physics Performance
    TDR (1998/9).
  • Work continuing to ensure ready to test new ideas
    with first data.
  • Concentrate here on more recent work.

39
Model Framework
  • Minimal Supersymmetric Extension of the Standard
    Model (MSSM) contains gt 105 free parameters,
    NMSSM etc. has more g difficult to map complete
    parameter space!
  • Assume specific well-motivated model framework in
    which generic signatures can be studied.
  • Often assume SUSY broken by gravitational
    interactions g mSUGRA/CMSSM framework unified
    masses and couplings at the GUT scale g 5 free
    parameters
  • (m0, m1/2, A0, tan(b), sgn(m)).
  • R-Parity assumed to be conserved.
  • Exclusive studies use benchmark points in mSUGRA
    parameter space
  • LHCC Points 1-6
  • Post-LEP benchmarks (Battaglia et al.)
  • Snowmass Points and Slopes (SPS)
  • etc

40
RH Squark Mass
  • Right handed squarks difficult as rarely decay
    via standard c02 chain
  • Typically BR (qR g c01q) gt 99.
  • Instead search for events with 2 hard jets and
    lots of ETmiss.
  • Reconstruct mass using stransverse mass
    (Allanach et al.)
  • mT22 min maxmT2(pTj(1),qTc(1)mc),
    mT2(pTj(2),qTc(2)mc)
  • Needs c01 mass measurement as input.
  • Also works for sleptons.




qTc(1)qTc(2)ETmiss
ATLAS
ATLAS
30 fb-1
100 fb-1
30 fb-1
Right squark
SPS1a
ATLAS
SPS1a
Right squark
SPS1a
Left slepton
Precision 3
41
Inclusive Studies
  • Following any discovery of SUSY next task will be
    to test broad features of model.
  • Question 1 Is R-Parity Conserved?
  • If YES possible DM candidate
  • LHC experiments sensitive only to LSP lifetimes lt
    1 ms (ltlt tU 13.7 Gyr)

LHC Point 5 (Physics TDR)
R-Parity Conserved
R-Parity Violated
ATLAS

Non-pointing photons from c01gGg

  • Question 2 Is the LSP the lightest neutralino?
  • Natural in many MSSM models
  • If YES then test for consistency with
    astrophysics
  • If NO then what is it?
  • e.g. Light Gravitino DM from GMSB models (not
    considered here)

GMSB Point 1b (Physics TDR)
ATLAS
42
Decay Resimulation
  • Second approach Decay Resimulation
  • Goal is to model complex background events using
    samples of tagged SM events.
  • Initially we will know
  • a lot about decays of SM particles (e.g. W, top)
  • a reasonable amount about the (gaussian)
    performance of the detector.
  • rather little about PDFs, the hard process and
    UE.
  • Philosophy
  • Tag seed events containing W/top
  • Reconstruct 4-momentum of W/top (x2 if e.g.
    ttbar)
  • Decay/hadronise with e.g. Pythia
  • Simulate decay products with atlfast(here) or
    fullsim
  • Remove original decay products from seed event
  • Merge new decay products with seed event (inc.
    ETmiss)
  • Perform standard SUSY analysis on merged event
  • Technique applicable to wide range of channels
    (not just SUSY)
  • Involves measurement of (top) pT useful for
    exotic-top searches?

43
Decay Resimulation
  • Select seed events
  • 2 leptons with pTgt25GeV
  • 2 jets with pTgt50GeV
  • ETmiss lt ltpT(l1),pT(l2)gt (SUSY)
  • Both m(lb) lt 155GeV
  • Solve 6 constraints for p(n)
  • Resimulate merge with seed
  • Apply 1l SUSY cuts

m(lb)
Z?mm
cut
ATLAS
Preliminary
GeV
ETmiss
Sample 5201, pT(top) gt 200 GeV reco
11.0.4205, 450 pb-1
ATLAS
Pull (top pT)
Preliminary
gt2 jets, Normalisation to data under study
ATLAS
Preliminary
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