6533b860fe1ef96bd12c3b3e
RESEARCH PRODUCT
The coannihilation codex
Maikel De VriesFelix YuAndrea ThammSonia El HedriJoachim BrodAnna KaminskaJoachim KoppJia LiuJose ZuritaXiaoping WangMichael J. Bakersubject
PhysicsParticle physicsNuclear and High Energy PhysicsAnnihilationLarge Hadron Collider010308 nuclear & particles physicsPhysicsElectroweak interactionDark matterFOS: Physical sciencesFermionQuantum number01 natural sciencesHigh Energy Physics - PhenomenologyMAJORANAHigh Energy Physics - Phenomenology (hep-ph)0103 physical sciencesddc:530Hadronic CollidersSymmetry breaking010306 general physicsPhenomenological Modelsdescription
We present a general classification of simplified models that lead to dark matter (DM) coannihilation processes of the form DM + X $\rightarrow$ SM$_1$ + SM$_2$, where X is a coannihilation partner for the DM particle and SM$_1$, SM$_2$ are Standard Model fields. Our classification also encompasses regular DM pair annihilation scenarios if DM and X are identical. Each coannhilation scenario motivates the introduction of a mediating particle M that can either belong to the Standard Model or be a new field, whereby the resulting interactions between the dark sector and the Standard Model are realized as tree-level and dimension-four couplings. We construct a basis of coannihilation models, classified by the $SU(3)_C\times SU(2)_L\times U(1)_Y$ quantum numbers of DM, X and M. Our main assumptions are that dark matter is an electrically neutral color singlet and that all new particles are either scalars, Dirac or Majorana fermions, or vectors. We illustrate how new scenarios arising from electroweak symmetry breaking effects can be connected to our electroweak symmetric simplified models. We offer a comprehensive discussion of the phenomenological features of our models, encompassing the physics of thermal freeze-out, direct and indirect detection constraints, and in particular searches at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC). Many novel signatures that are not covered in current LHC searches are emphasized, and new and improved LHC analyses tackling these signatures are proposed. We discuss how the coannihilation simplified models can be used to connect results from all classes of experiments in a straightforward and transparent way. This point is illustrated with a detailed discussion of the phenomenology of a particular simplified model featuring leptoquark-mediated dark matter coannihilation.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2015-01-01 | Journal of High Energy Physics |