Effects of the Muon g-2 Anomaly on Dark Matter and Accelerator Physics
Abstract
The effect of the recently observed 2.6 sigma deviation of the muon anomalous magnetic moment (amu = (gmu -2)/2) from its Standard Model prediction is examined within the framework of supergravity models with grand unification and R parity invariance. The constraints of the Higgs mass bounds, the b -> s gamma bounds (including the large tan beta NLO corrections) and the cosmological relic density of light neutralinos (including all slepton neutralino coannihilation effects) are included in the analysis. For universal soft breaking, the Higgs and b -> s gamma bounds puts a lower bound m1/2 >~ 300 GeV, most of the parameter space now falling in the co-annihilation region. The 2 sigma lower bound on the magnetic moment anomaly places an upper bound of m1/2 ~< 800 GeV. It is seen that mSUGRA requires that amu ~< 50 × 10-10. One finds for mh > 114 GeV, that tan beta > 5(7) for A0 = 0(-4 m1/2) and for mh > 120 GeV, one has tan beta > 15 (10) for A0 = 0(-4m1/2). The sparticle spectrum is now much constrained, and the reaches of the Tevatron RUN II, NLC, and LHC for new physics discovery are discussed. Dark matter detection rates are examined, and it is seen that future detectors now would be able to scan most of the parameter space. Models with non-universal soft breaking in the Higgs and third generation of squarks and sleptons are exmained, and it is seen that a new Z s-channel annihilation of neutralinos in the early universe is possible with dark matter detection rates accessible to the next round of detectors.
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