Interplay between the muon g-2 anomaly and the PTA nHZ gravitational waves from domain walls in next-to minimal supersymmetric standard model
Abstract
With some explicitly Z3 breaking terms in the NMSSM effective superpotential and scalar potential, domain walls (DWs) from spontaneously breaking of the discrete symmetry in approximate Z3-invariant NMSSM can collapse and lead to observable stochastic gravitational wave (GW) background signals. In the presence of a hidden sector, such terms may originate from the geometric superconformal breaking with holomorphic quadratic correction to frame function when the global scale-invariant superpotential is naturally embedded into the canonical superconformal supergravity models. The smallness of such mass parameters in the NMSSM may be traced back to the original superconformal invariance. Naive estimations indicate that a SUSY explanation to muon g-2 anomaly can have tension with the constraints on SUSY by PTA data, because large SUSY contributions to aμ in general needs relatively light superpartners while present gw0 can set the lower bounds for msoft. We calculate numerically the signatures of GW produced from the collapse of DWs and find that the observed nHZ stochastic GW background by NANOGrav, etc., can indeed be explained with proper tiny values of m3/2 10-14 eV for S2 case (and m3/2 10-10 eV for Hu Hd case), respectively. Besides, there are still some parameter points, whose GW spectra intersect with the NANOGrav signal region, that can explain the muon g-2 anomaly to 1σ range.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.