Search for Squark Production in R-Parity Violating Supersymmetry at
HERA
One of the most fundamental ideas in modern physics
is that of symmetry. One manifestation of symmetry in particle
physics arises in the structure of the so-called families of the most
fundamental particles. For example, in the Standard Model of
particle physics a class of six particles called leptons form a group
with a natural 3 x 2 structure - three (of which one is the electron)
have measurable mass and charge, whereas their three partners
have masses which are at the lower limit of what contemporary science
can measure and no charge. Exactly why this set of particles should
exhibit this pattern is not known, yet intriguingly there exists
another class of six particles, the quarks (of which two are
commonly found in the proton), which also exhibits a similar 3 x 2
structure. In this group all six carry charge, but one set of three is
positive whilst the other three are negative. The existence of these
two parallel, yet different, structures suggests that there is some
more fundamental structure, or symmetry, at play.
One of the popular current theories explaining this
``higher'' symmetry is called
supersymmetry or SUSY. SUSY theories
have several consequences. One such consequence is that these 3 x 2
families (quarks and leptons) each have supersymmetric partner
families, called squarks and sleptons. The quantity R-Parity
is a quantum number which distinguishes between everyday particles
and SUSY particles - the new particles introduced by SUSY
have R-Parity = -1 and the known Standard Model particles all have
R-Parity = +1. In many versions of SUSY,
R-parity is conserved in particle interactions, i.e.
the overall R-parity of the initial state has to match that of the
final state. However, there is no strong underlying reason why
R-parity conservation should be obeyed.
If it is not conserved, reactions become
possible in which two Standard Model particles can fuse to form a SUSY
particle.
So R-Parity violating SUSY allows supersymmetric particles
to be produced as resonances in high energy interactions of Standard
Model particles, fleetingly exist and then decay back into
Standard Model particles that could be observed in a
detector. This possibility is what the publication "Search for Squark
Production in R-Parity Violating Supersymmetry at HERA" examines. The
HERA accelerator collides electrons and protons at higher energies
than any other machine in the world. The presented work looks for
evidence that the incoming electron and a quark from the incoming
proton have briefly fused to form a squark, which can then decay via
several different paths. The task is not an easy one, for many of the
ways in which these squarks could decay are virtually
indistinguishable from much more commonplace Standard Model
processes that are studied at HERA.
The solution is to carefully compare the data collected in the detector
with predictions for Standard Model and for SUSY processes.
Small
differences between the data and the Standard Model predictions
for quantities such as the energies that the decay
products have, the angle at which they are expected to be scattered
into the detector or their masses are exploited. However, even after
all this meticulous detective work, the conclusion is drawn that there
is, as yet, no evidence for SUSY particles being produced at HERA. The
story doesn't quite stop there however, because the analysis
enables specific statements to be made
about exactly which combinations of SUSY parameters can be ruled out.
The plot below shows a graphical example of such limits, for
the coupling lambda'1j1, which tells us for example
how likely a positron and a down quark are to fuse into an up
squark. The limits depend on the mass of the squark.
The red region indicates combinations of couplings and squark masses
that can be ruled out with reasonable (95%) confidence for all
choices of other SUSY parameters considered. The yellow region shows the
additional combinations which are ruled out for at least some choices of other
SUSY parameters. It can be
seen that the combinations of light squarks (small values of
Msquark) and strong couplings (large values of lambda') are
the easiest to rule out. Conversely, heavy squarks and weak couplings
are the hardest to exclude. So there is no
evidence for SUSY in the H1 data yet, but future data will extend the
sensitivity into the white region in the bottom
right-hand corner of the plot.