Probing stops in the coannihilation region at the HL-LHC: a comparative study of different processes

Abstract

In the minimal supersymmetric model, the coannihilation of the lighter stop t1 and bino-like dark matter provides a feasible way to accommodate the correct dark matter relic abundance. In this scenario, due to the compressed masses, t1 merely appears as missing energy at the LHC and thus the pair production of t1 can only be probed by requiring an associated energetic jet. Meanwhile, since t2 and b1 are correlated in mass and mixing with t1, the production of t2t2* or b1b1*, each of which dominantly decays into t1 plus Z, h or W boson, may serve as a complementary probe. We examine all these processes at the HL-LHC and find that the 2σ sensitivity to mass can be as large as about 570 GeV, 600 GeV and 1.1 TeV from the production process of t1t1*+ jet, t2t2* and b1b1*, respectively.

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