Complementarity of the CERN Large Hadron Collider and the $e^+e^-$ International Linear Collider
S.Y. Choi

TL;DR
This paper discusses how the CERN Large Hadron Collider and the proposed International Linear Collider complement each other in exploring fundamental physics, especially electroweak symmetry breaking and force unification within supersymmetry.
Contribution
It reviews the complementary roles of LHC and ILC in providing a comprehensive understanding of electroweak symmetry breaking and force unification in supersymmetric theories.
Findings
LHC and ILC together can uncover new matter structures.
They provide high-precision measurements of electroweak symmetry breaking.
The combined data can test supersymmetric unification models.
Abstract
The next-generation high-energy facilities, the CERN Large Hadron Collider (LHC) and the prospective International Linear Collider (ILC), are expected to unravel new structures of matter and forces from the electroweak scale to the TeV scale. In this report we review the complementary role of LHC and ILC in drawing a comprehensive and high-precision picture of the mechanism breaking the electroweak symmetries and generating mass, and the unification of forces in the frame of supersymmetry.
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