4–8 Aug 2015
America/Detroit timezone

Producing Heavy Squarks at 100 TeV

4 Aug 2015, 17:30
15m
Vandenberg (Michigan League)

Vandenberg

Michigan League

BSM Collider BSM Physics

Speaker

Mr Bob Zheng (University of Michigan)

Description

If Supersymmetry is realized in nature, there are both theoretical and phenomenological reasons to believe that the masses of scalar superpartners to the quarks (squarks) lie in the tens of TeV range. This renders squark pair production kinematically out of reach for both LHC-14 and 100 TeV future hadron colliders. In this talk, I will instead discuss the associated production of a heavy squark along with superpartners to gauge bosons (gauginos) at a 100 TeV collider. This channel provides a powerful probe of the heavy squark parameter space, and can even be the discovery mode for Supersymmetry. Using a simple set of kinematic cuts, I will show that for gaugino masses in the multi-TeV range, squarks with masses up to 30 TeV can be discovered at a 100 TeV collider with sufficient luminosity.
Oral or Poster Presentation Oral

Primary author

Mr Bob Zheng (University of Michigan)

Co-author

Mr Sebastian Ellis (University of Michigan)

Presentation materials