Towards the next generation of simplified dark matter models

This White Paper is an input to the ongoing discussion about the extension and refinement of simplified Dark Matter (DM) models. Based on two concrete examples, we show how existing simplified DM models (SDMM) can be extended to provide a more accurate and comprehensive framework to interpret and ch...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Albert, Andreas (Author) , Bauer, Martin (Author)
Format: Article (Journal) Chapter/Article
Language:English
Published: 2016
In: Arxiv

Online Access:Verlag, kostenfrei, Volltext: http://arxiv.org/abs/1607.06680
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Author Notes:Andreas Albert, Martin Bauer, Oliver Buchmueller, Jim Brooke, David G. Cerdeno, Matthew Citron, Gavin Davies, Annapaola de Cosa, Albert De Roeck, Andrea De Simone, Tristan Du Pree, John Ellis, Henning Flaecher, Malcolm Fairbairn, Alexander Grohsjean, Kristian Hahn, Ulrich Haisch, Philip C. Harris, Valentin V. Khoze, Greg Landsberg, Christopher McCabe, Bjoern Penning, Veronica Sanz, Christian Schwanenberger, Pat Scott, and Nicholas Wardle
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Summary:This White Paper is an input to the ongoing discussion about the extension and refinement of simplified Dark Matter (DM) models. Based on two concrete examples, we show how existing simplified DM models (SDMM) can be extended to provide a more accurate and comprehensive framework to interpret and characterise collider searches. In the first example we extend the canonical SDMM with a scalar mediator to include mixing with the Higgs boson. We show that this approach not only provides a better description of the underlying kinematic properties that a complete model would possess, but also offers the option of using this more realistic class of scalar mixing models to compare and combine consistently searches based on different experimental signatures. The second example outlines how a new physics signal observed in a visible channel can be connected to DM by extending a simplified model including effective couplings. This discovery scenario uses the recently observed excess in the high-mass diphoton searches of ATLAS and CMS for a case study to show that such a pragmatic approach can aid the experimental search programme to verify/falsify a potential signal and to study its underlying nature. In the next part of the White Paper we outline other interesting options for SDMM that could be studied in more detail in the future. Finally, we discuss important aspects of supersymmetric models for DM and how these could help to develop of more complete SDMM.
Item Description:Gesehen am 10.01.2018
Physical Description:Online Resource