Skip to main content
U.S. Department of Energy
Office of Scientific and Technical Information

The Gold-Plated Channel for Supersymmetric Higgs via Higgsphilic Z'

Journal Article · · TBD
OSTI ID:1967966
The lightest CP-even Higgs boson in weak-scale supersymmetry can be discovered spectacularly early, even from 1 inverse fb of data at 7 TeV LHC, if it decays to a pair of light Z', which in turn, decays to a pair of hard and 'isolated' leptons. These Z' must have infinitesimal couplings to light fermions in order to be consistent with precision electroweak constraints, while they have mild to moderate couplings to Higgs. Hence they are Higgsphilic. A Z' with these properties appears at the electroweak scale in the 'viable' gravity mediated supersymmetry breaking. We construct an effective model to extract the Z' phenomenology. Even in a decoupled limit where all gauginos and sfermions are heavy and supersymmetry production is purely electroweak, we find that the Higgs boson as well as supersymmetry can be found early through the discovery of Z' in samples of events with 4 leptons and 4 leptons + missing energy respectively. Additionally, in cases where the Z' is long-lived, we show that the trigger menus employed at the ATLAS detector to find long lived particles are capable of finding thousands of Higgs events from 1 inverse fb of data.
Research Organization:
Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory (FNAL), Batavia, IL (United States)
Sponsoring Organization:
USDOE Office of Science (SC), High Energy Physics (HEP) (SC-25)
DOE Contract Number:
AC02-07CH11359
OSTI ID:
1967966
Report Number(s):
FERMILAB-PUB-11-067-T; arXiv:1103.3504; oai:inspirehep.net:893165
Journal Information:
TBD, Journal Name: TBD
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English

Similar Records

What if the Higgsino is the lightest supersymmetric particles
Conference · Thu Oct 31 23:00:00 EST 1985 · OSTI ID:6075886

Extra vectorlike matter and the lightest Higgs scalar boson mass in low-energy supersymmetry
Journal Article · Sun Jan 31 23:00:00 EST 2010 · Physical Review. D, Particles Fields · OSTI ID:21409199