ATLAS experiment searches for natural supersymmetry using novel techniques

ATLAS Experiment searches for Natural Supersymmetry using Novel Techniques
Visualisation of the highest jet multiplicity event selected in a control region used to make predictions of the background from multijet production. This event was recorded by ATLAS on 18 July 2018, and contains 19 jets, illustrated by cones. Yellow blocks represent the calorimeter energy measured in in noise-suppressed clusters. Of the reconstructed jets, 16 (10) have transverse momenta above 50 GeV (80 GeV). Credit: ATLAS Collaboration/CERN

In new results presented at CERN, the ATLAS Experiment's search for supersymmetry (SUSY) reached new levels of sensitivity. The results examine a popular SUSY extension studied at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC): the "Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model" (MSSM), which includes the minimum required number of new particles and interactions to make predictions at the LHC energies. However, even this minimal model introduces a large amount of new parameters (masses and other properties of the new particles), whose values are not predicted by the theory (free parameters).

To frame their search, ATLAS physicists look for "natural" SUSY, which assumes the various corrections to the Higgs mass comparable in magnitude and their sum close to the electroweak scale (v ~ 246 GeV). Under this paradigm, the supersymmetric partners of the third-generation quarks ("top and bottom squarks") and gluons ("gluinos") could have masses close to the TeV scale, and would be produced through the strong interaction at rates large enough to be observed at the LHC.

In a recent CERN LHC seminar, the ATLAS Collaboration presented new results in the search for natural SUSY, including searches for top squarks and gluinos using the full LHC Run-2 dataset collected between 2015 and 2018. The new results explore previously uncovered, challenging regions of the free parameter space. This is achieved thanks to new analysis techniques improving the identification of low-energy ("soft") and high-energy ("boosted") particles in the final state.

ATLAS' search for top squarks was performed by selecting proton–proton collisions containing up to one electron or muon. For top-squark masses less than the top-quark mass of 173 GeV (see Figure 1), the resulting decay products tend to be soft and therefore difficult to identify. Physicists developed new techniques based on charged-particle tracking to better identify these decay products, thus significantly improving the experimental sensitivity. For larger top-squark masses, the decay products are boosted, resulting in high-energy, close-by decay products. Physicists improved the search in this regime by using, among other techniques, more precise estimates of the statistical significance of the missing transverse momentum in a collision event.

ATLAS Experiment searches for Natural Supersymmetry using Novel Techniques
Figure 1: Schematic representation of the various topologies of top-squark decays in the scenarios presented at today's seminar (see link in footer). The region where the top-squark is lighter than the neutralino is not allowed in the models considered. Credit: ATLAS Collaboration/CERN

The new search for gluinos looks at events containing eight or more "jets"—collimated sprays of hadrons—and missing transverse momentum generated by the production of stable neutralinos in the gluino decays, which, similar to neutrinos, are not directly detected by ATLAS. Physicists employed new reconstruction techniques to improve the energy resolution of the jets and the missing transverse momentum, allowing them to better separate the putative signal from background processes. These take advantage of "particle-flow" jet algorithms that combine information from both the tracking detector and the calorimeter system.

ATLAS Experiment searches for Natural Supersymmetry using Novel Techniques
Figure 2: Updated exclusion limits on (left) gluino and (right) top-squark production including the new results presented by ATLAS at the CERN LHC seminar today. Credit: ATLAS Collaboration/CERN

ATLAS physicists also optimised their event-selection criteria to enhance the contribution of possible SUSY signals compared to the Standard Model background processes. No excess was observed in the data. The results were used to derive exclusion limits on MSSM-inspired simplified models in terms of gluino, top-squark and neutralino masses (see Figure 2).

The new analyses significantly extend the sensitivity of the searches and further constrain the available parameter space for natural SUSY. The exclusion of heavy top squarks is extended from 1 to 1.25 TeV. The search continues.

More information: CERN LHC Seminar: Constraining natural supersymmetry with the ATLAS detector by Jeanette Miriam Lorenz indico.cern.ch/event/868249/

Provided by ATLAS Experiment

Citation: ATLAS experiment searches for natural supersymmetry using novel techniques (2020, February 24) retrieved 28 March 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2020-02-atlas-natural-supersymmetry-techniques.html
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