Magnifying the ATLAS Stealth Stop Splinter: Impact of Spin Correlations and Finite Widths

Abstract

In this paper, we recast a "stealth stop" search in the notoriously difficult region of the stop-neutralino Simplified Model parameter space for which m(t) - m() mt. The properties of the final state are nearly identical for tops and stops, while the rate for stop pair production is O(10\%) of that for tt. Stop searches away from this stealth region have left behind a "splinter" of open parameter space when m(t) mt. Removing this splinter requires surgical precision: the ATLAS constraint on stop pair production reinterpreted here treats the signal as a contaminant to the measurement of the top pair production cross section using data from s = 7 TeV and 8 TeV in a correlated way to control for some systematic errors. ATLAS fixed m(t) mt and m()= 1 GeV, implying that a careful recasting of these results into the full m(t) - m() plane is warranted. We find that the parameter space with m() 55 GeV is excluded for m(t) mt --- although this search does cover new parameter space, it is unable to fully pull the splinter. Along the way, we review a variety of interesting physical issues in detail: (i) when the two-body width is a good approximation; (ii) what the impact on the total rate from taking the narrow width is a good approximation; (iii) how the production rate is affected when the wrong widths are used; (iv) what role the spin correlations play in the limits. In addition, we provide a guide to using MadGraph for implementing the full production including finite width and spin correlation effects, and we survey a variety of pitfalls one might encounter.

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