Testing the Technicolor Interpretation of CDF's Dijet Excess at the LHC
Estia Eichten, Kenneth Lane, Adam Martin, Eric Pilon

TL;DR
This paper investigates the potential to confirm the technicolor explanation for the CDF dijet excess at the LHC by proposing specific kinematic tests and analyzing related decay channels with current and future collider data.
Contribution
It introduces new LHC-specific kinematic cuts and tests to independently verify the technicolor hypothesis for the CDF dijet excess, focusing on related decay channels.
Findings
Standard cuts cannot confirm the dijet signal at LHC.
Proposed tailored cuts may reveal technicolor signals.
Certain channels like ZπT and WZ are promising for confirmation.
Abstract
Under the assumption that the dijet excess seen by the CDF Collaboration near 150 Gev in Wjj production is due to the lightest technipion of the low-scale technicolor process , we study its observability in LHC detectors with 1--20 inverse femtobarns of data. We describe interesting new kinematic tests that can provide independent confirmation of this LSTC hypothesis. We find that cuts similar to those employed by CDF, and recently by ATLAS, cannot confirm the dijet signal. We propose cuts tailored to the LSTC hypothesis and its backgrounds at the LHC that may reveal . Observation of the isospin-related channel and of in the three lepton plus neutrino and dilepton plus dijet modes will be important confirmations of the LSTC…
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Taxonomy
TopicsParticle physics theoretical and experimental studies · High-Energy Particle Collisions Research · Black Holes and Theoretical Physics
