Environmentally Selected WIMP Dark Matter with High-Scale Supersymmetry Breaking
Gilly Elor, Hock-Seng Goh, Lawrence J. Hall, Piyush Kumar, Yasunori, Nomura

TL;DR
This paper investigates how environmental selection in a multiverse could determine the weak scale and dark matter abundance, proposing specific supersymmetric models with testable predictions for dark matter detection and collider experiments.
Contribution
It introduces two low-energy effective theories derived from a high-scale supersymmetric framework, linking Higgs mass, dark matter properties, and experimental signatures.
Findings
Dark matter detection experiments will probe much of the parameter space.
Dark matter mass and nucleon cross section are correlated with Higgs mass.
Certain models predict a Higgs mass around 141 GeV, consistent with experimental hints.
Abstract
We explore the possibility that both the weak scale and the thermal relic dark matter abundance are environmentally selected in a multiverse. An underlying supersymmetric theory containing the states of the MSSM and singlets, with supersymmetry and R symmetry broken at unified scales, has just two realistic low energy effective theories. One theory, (SM + \tilde{w}), is the Standard Model augmented only by the wino, having a mass near 3 TeV, and has a Higgs boson mass in the range of (127 - 142) GeV. The other theory, (SM + \tilde{h}/\tilde{s}), has Higgsinos and a singlino added to the Standard Model. The Higgs boson mass depends on the single new Yukawa coupling of the theory, y, and is near 141 GeV for small y but grows to be as large as 210 GeV as this new coupling approaches strong coupling at high energies. Much of the parameter space of this theory will be probed by direct…
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