Refine
Has Fulltext
- yes (13)
Is part of the Bibliography
- yes (13)
Year of publication
Document Type
- Doctoral Thesis (13)
Keywords
- Supersymmetrie (13) (remove)
Institute
Sonstige beteiligte Institutionen
- ATLAS Collaboration (1)
- CERN (1)
The results of two analyses searching for supersymmetry (SUSY) in data of the ATLAS experiment are presented in this thesis. The data were recorded in proton-proton collisions at the Large Hadron Collider in 2012 at a centre of mass energy of \(\sqrt{s}\)=8 TeV and correspond to an integrated luminosity of 20.3 fb\(^{−1}\). The first search is performed in signatures containing an opposite-sign electron or muon pair, which is compatible with originating from a Z boson decay, in addition to jets and large missing transverse momentum. The analysis targets the production of squarks and gluinos in R-parity conserving (RPC) models with SUSY breaking via General Gauge Mediation (GGM). The main Standard Model (SM) backgrounds are \(t\overline t\), WW, W+t and Z to \(\tau \tau\) processes which are entirely estimated from data using different-flavour events. Besides that, the SM production of Z bosons in association with jets and large fake missing momentum from mismeasurements plays a role and is predicted with the data-driven jet smearing method. Backgrounds from events with fake leptons are estimated with the data-driven matrix method. WZ/ZZ production as well as smaller background contributions are determined from Monte-Carlo simulations. The search observes an excess of data over the SM prediction with a local significance of 3.0 \(\sigma\) in the electron channel, 1.7 \(\sigma\) in the muon channel and 3.0 \(\sigma\) when the two channels are added together. The results are used to constrain the parameters of the GGM model. The second analysis uses the already published results of an ATLAS search for SUSY in events with one isolated electron or muon, jets and missing transverse momentum to reinterpret them in the context of squark and gluino production in SUSY models with R-parity violating (RPV) \(LQ\overline D\)-operators. In contrast to RPC models, the lightest SUSY particle (LSP) is not stable but decays into SM particles. "Standard" analyses often do not consider SUSY models with RPV although they are in principle sensitive to them. The exclusion limits on the squark and gluino mass obtained from the reinterpretation extend up to 1200 GeV. These are the first results by any ATLAS SUSY search which systematically cover a wide range of RPV couplings in the case of prompt LSP decays. However, the analysis is not sensitive to the full parameter space of the \(LQ\overline D\)-model and reveals gaps in the ATLAS SUSY program which have to be closed by dedicated search strategies in the future.
The standard model (SM) of particle physics is for the last three decades a very successful description of the properties and interactions of all known elementary particles. Currently, it is again probed with the first collisions at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC). It is widely expected that new physics will be detected at the LHC and the SM has to be extended. The most exhaustive analyzed extension of the SM is supersymmetry (SUSY). SUSY can not only solve intrinsic problems of the SM like the hierarchy problem, but it also postulates new particles which might explain the nature of dark matter in the universe. The majority of all studies about dark matter in the framework of SUSY has focused on the minimal supersymmetric standard model (MSSM). The aim of this work is to consider scenarios beyond that scope. We consider two models which explain not only dark matter but also neutrino masses: the gravitino as dark matter in gauge mediated SUSY breaking (GMSB) with bilinear broken $R$-parity as well as different seesaw scenarios with the neutralino as dark matter candidate. Furthermore, we also study the next-to-minimal supersymmetric standard model (NMSSM) which solves the \(\mu\)-problem of the MSSM and discuss the properties of the neutralino as dark matter candidate. In case of $R$-parity violation, light gravitinos are often the only remaining candidate for dark matter in SUSY because of their very long life time. We reconsider the cosmological gravitino problem arising for this kind of models. It will be shown that the proposed solution for the overclosure of the universe by light gravitinos, namely the entropy production by decays of GMSB messenger, just works in a small subset of models and in fine-tuned regions of the parameter space. This is a consequence of two effects so far overlooked: the enhanced decay channels in massive vector bosons and the impact of charged messenger particles. Both aspects cause an interplay between different cosmological restrictions which lead to strong constraints on the parameters of GMSB models. Afterwards, a minimal supergravity (mSugra) scenario with additional chiral superfields at high energy scales is considered. These fields are arranged in complete $SU(5)$ multiplets in order to maintain gauge unification. The new fields generate a dimension 5 operator to explain neutrino data. Furthermore, they cause large differences in mass spectrum of MSSM fields because of the different evaluation of the renormalization group equations what changes also the properties of the lightest neutralino as dark matter candidate. We discuss the parameter space of all three possible seesaw scenarios with respect to dark matter and the impact on rare lepton flavor violating processes. As we will see, especially in seesaw type~III but also in type~II the mass spectrum and regions of parameter space consistent with dark matter differ significantly in comparison to a common mSugra scenario. Moreover, the experimental bounds, in particular of branching ratios like \(l_i \rightarrow l_j \gamma\), cause large constraints on the seesaw parameters.
Supersymmetry is currently the best motivated extension of the Standard Model and will be subject to extensive studies in the upcoming generation of colliders. The e-e- mode would be a straight forward extension to the currently planed International Linear Collider, planned to operate in e+e- mode. The low background in this mode may prove advantageous in the study of CP- and Lepton Flavour Violtation. In this work a CP sensitive observable based on transverse beam polarisation is introduced and the impact of neutralino mixing on the total cross section in cas of non-vanishing CP-violtating phases is studied in representative scenarios including non-GUT scenarios. Additionally, the mixing of sleptons is studied in the context of LFV, an analytical approximation is developed, and possible background free measurements of these effects are investigated.