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  Where does the hidden supersymmetric sector of the MSSM come from?

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624 views

I`ve already asked something like this in August at physics.se but did not get any answere so far ...

At the end of Chapter 14 of the "Supersymmetry Demystified book" from Patrick Labelle it is mentioned that to constrain the number of allowed softly SUSY breaking terms, a shadow or hidden supersymmetric sector can be assumed. In this hidden sector, SUSY is sponteanously broken and communicated to the visible sector of the MSSM where it leads to the desired soft SUSY breaking.

Because this was not explained any further, I am wondering where the particles of this shadow sector, which interacts only through a messenger interaction with the MSSM particles, would come from?

I`ve only (not in any detail) heard some catchwards such as SUGRA or gauge mediated SUSY breaking for example. I am still interested to learn in a bit more detail about what are the most important mechanisms to mediate SUSY breaking from such a hidden sector (and how this works) as currently considered by people working on this topic?

Additional thougth: Would a possible higgs at about 125 GeV and not much else at the "LHC scale" change the current thinking or constrain this business?

asked Dec 21, 2011 in Theoretical Physics by Dilaton (6,240 points) [ revision history ]

1 Answer

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First of all, the soft SUSY-breaking terms are just an "effective" description that replaces lots of qualitative, unknown physics by 100+ parameters for the known physics. At the end, one wants to construct a full theory. For example (an important example), if the full theory is a stabilized string theory compactification, there aren't any undetermined parameters left: everything is calculable, including the value of the superpartner masses and the rest of the 100+ soft SUSY breaking coefficients. The same holds for a complete model in quantum field theory.

Now, in this full theory, it's still true that SUSY is spontaneously broken; in the description with the soft SUSY breaking terms, SUSY is really "explicitly broken" by these soft SUSY-breaking terms. This explicit breaking is just required to be "soft", i.e. not influencing short-distance SUSY cancellations e.g. to the Higgs mass. The soft SUSY breaking terms are exactly the explicit SUSY-breaking terms that you may potentially produce out of a spontaneous SUSY breaking mechanism by additional physics if you neglect this additional physics.

Another fact to realize is that the fields of the MSSM aren't enough to break SUSY. One may go through the possibilities. A typical SUSY breaking will assign a nonzero vev to an appropriate field but there's no appropriate field in the MSSM that could be the primary source of SUSY breaking. So one is de facto required to add additional fields beyond the MSSM and they're the primary causes of SUSY breaking – their vev etc. Once SUSY is strongly broken in phenomena involving these new fields, it gets broken everywhere: the breaking is "mediated" to the MSSM (=visible sector), too.

Where does the hidden sector come from? You could ask the same question about the MSSM fields, too. Where do they come from? The hidden sector is just another collection of fields. In quantum field theory, one just has to add all the fields manually. MSSM isn't a "minimum field theory" in any sense we understand, and MSSM plus hidden sector isn't either, so there's really no difference. We may extend the MSSM to a bigger GUT-like model by bigger symmetries; but we won't encounter too many candidates for the primordial SUSY breaking. The hidden sector needed to break SUSY is typically completely new and unrelated to symmetries to the visible sector.

In string/M-theory, one may get a more non-vacuous answer to such questions because string theory predicts not only the exact values of all the parameters; for a particular compactification, it also predicts the exact field content. So one may say that the MSSM fields and the other fields come from "somewhere", literally, e.g. from some particular modes of stringy fields that propagate either in the whole spacetime or at some smaller locus of the extra dimensions or on some branes that are localized in the extra dimensions, and so on.

Just to mention a visually simple example, heterotic M-theory by Hořava and Witten represents the whole world as $M^4\times CY_3 \times I^1$ where $M^4$ is the Minkowski space we know, $CY_3$ is a six-real-dimensional manifold (Calabi-Yau) with the 6 extra dimensions, and $I^1$ is a line interval. In total, one has 11 dimensions. The line interval has two boundaries, each of which is occupied by an $E_8$ gauge supermultiplet. One of them gives rise, after breaking of GUT-like symmetries, to the MSSM; the other boundary contains additional gauginos from another $E_8$ group. Gaugino condensation of these other gauginos, a hidden sector, may be the source of SUSY breaking that gets communicated to our boundary, i.e. the other $E_8$.

The different mechanisms of SUSY breaking are really classified according to the method of mediation to the MSSM. So you hear terms like gauge-mediated, gravity-mediated, anomaly-mediated, and so on. Historically, people would be excited about gauge mediation (mSUGRA is a model that is similar to it) and they said lots of things why they saw it was the best one. The generic gauge-mediated models with all light superpartners, which people considered natural in them, are mostly ruled out by the LHC data by now. For various reasons, things like the anomaly-mediated SUSY breaking were gradually becoming preferred in recent year or so and the likely 125 GeV Higgs is another reason to think that those could be the preferred scenarios.

This is a very technical subject whose details are inappropriate for a single answer at this server, I think. Pick some review of SUSY breaking, e.g. this one:

http://motls.blogspot.com/2006/01/supersymmetry-breaking.html
http://arxiv.org/abs/hep-th/0601076

This does focus on anomaly-mediated breaking as well, something that made it relatively ahead of time and that could turn out to be relevant.

This post has been migrated from (A51.SE)
answered Dec 22, 2011 by Luboš Motl (10,278 points) [ no revision ]
Dear Lumo, thanks very much for this very nice, detailed, and even for me comprehensibly answer :-). I`m now keen to study supersymmetry-breaking further from the links You gave. And since I am not a big fan of manually put in "fudge factors", I hope to understand and learn a bit more deeply how it all can be explained from string theory in the course of time.

This post has been migrated from (A51.SE)
Dear @Silent_Lurker, thanks for your excitement. My emotional relationship to "fudge factor" in general is similar but it's how effective theories always have to work – and the parameters are found by fitting/measuring even though fitting is another portion of the things we probably don't like in general. ;-) Of course, finding a more accurate explanation that needs no fudging is a key driver of theoretical research in HEP physics but one must also understands that finding an unfudged explanation is often tough, and it's often useless in practice.

This post has been migrated from (A51.SE)
Aside from Yael's review (which is very good), Markus Luty's http://arxiv.org/abs/hep-th/0509029 and http://arxiv.org/abs/hep-ph/0702069 by Intriligator and Seiberg are worth a look. (The latter is more oriented toward gauge mediation.) Section 7 of Stephen Martin's SUSY primer http://arxiv.org/abs/hep-ph/9709356 is a good concise overview. Anomaly mediation is beautiful, but its $\mu/B\mu$ problem is nasty. AMSB for gauginos and random junk for scalars is also increasingly plausible....

This post has been migrated from (A51.SE)
Good, @Matt, will look at those as well.

This post has been migrated from (A51.SE)

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