Z'-gauge Bosons as Harbingers of Low Mass Strings
Luis A. Anchordoqui, Ignatios Antoniadis, Haim Goldberg, Xing Huang,, Dieter Lust, Tomasz R. Taylor

TL;DR
Massive Z'-gauge bosons predicted by low string scale models could be detectable at colliders, with specific signals like dijet plus W events, and their properties depend on anomaly cancellation conditions in D-brane constructions.
Contribution
This paper links low string scale theories with collider signals by analyzing Z'-gauge bosons in D-brane models, providing predictions for their detection at Tevatron and LHC.
Findings
Potential explanation for CDF dijet excess via leptophobic Z'
Predictions for Z'-gauge boson production cross sections at LHC
Analysis of anomaly conditions affecting Z' properties
Abstract
Massive Z'-gauge bosons act as excellent harbingers for string compactifications with a low string scale. In D-brane models they are associated to U(1) gauge symmetries that are either anomalous in four dimensions or exhibit a hidden higher dimensional anomaly. We discuss the possible signals of massive Z'-gauge bosons at hadron collider machines (Tevatron, LHC) in a minimal D-brane model consisting out of four stacks of D-branes. In this construction, there are two massive gauge bosons, which can be naturally associated with baryon number B and B-L (L being lepton number). Here baryon number is always anomalous in four dimensions, whereas the presence of a four-dimensional B-L anomaly depends on the U(1)-charges of the right handed neutrinos. In case B-L is anomaly free, a mass hierarchy between the two associated Z'-gauge bosons can be explained. In our phenomenological discussion…
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