Searching for LFV Flavon decays at hadron colliders
Abstract
The search for Flavons with a mass of O(1) TeV at current and future colliders might probe low-scale flavor models. We are interested in the simplest model that invokes the Froggatt-Nielsen (FN) mechanism with an Abelian flavor symmetry, which includes a Higgs doublet and a FN complex singlet. Assuming a CP conserving scalar potential, there are a CP-even HF and a CP-odd AF Flavons with lepton flavor violating (LFV) couplings. The former can mix with the standard-model-like Higgs boson, thereby inducing tree-level LFV Higgs interactions that may be at the reach of the LHC. We study the constraints on the parameter space of the model from low-energy LFV processes, which are then used to evaluate the Flavon decay widths and the gg φ τμ (φ=HF,\,AF) production cross section at hadron colliders. After imposing several kinematic cuts to reduce the SM main background, we find that for mHF about 200-350 GeV, the decay HF τ μ might be at the reach of the LHC for a luminosity in the range 1-3 ab-1, however, a luminosity of the order of 10 ab-1 would be required to detect the AF τ μ decay. On the other hand a future 100 TeV pp collider could probe masses as high as O(10) TeV if it reaches an integrated luminosity of at least 20 ab-1. Therefore, the 100 TeV Collider could work as a Flavon factory.
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