Revisiting the Higgs Mass and Dark Matter in the CMSSM
John Ellis, Keith A. Olive

TL;DR
This paper examines the implications of Higgs mass measurements around 119-125 GeV on the parameter space of the CMSSM and dark matter detection prospects, considering recent collider and astrophysical constraints.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of how different Higgs mass hints influence the favored regions in CMSSM parameter space and dark matter detection predictions.
Findings
m_h ~ 125 GeV disfavors focus-point and low-tan beta coannihilation strips.
m_h ~ 119 GeV allows more parameter space options.
XENON100 data constrains models with lower Higgs mass.
Abstract
Taking into account the available accelerator and astrophysical constraints, the mass of the lightest neutral Higgs boson h in the minimal supersymmetric extension of the Standard Model with universal soft supersymmetry-breaking masses (CMSSM) has been estimated to lie between 114 and ~ 130 GeV. Recent data from ATLAS and CMS hint that m_h ~ 125 GeV, though m_h ~ 119 GeV may still be a possibility. Here we study the consequences for the parameters of the CMSSM and direct dark matter detection if the Higgs hint is confirmed, focusing on the strips in the (m_1/2, m_0) planes for different tan beta and A_0 where the relic density of the lightest neutralino chi falls within the range of the cosmological cold dark matter density allowed by WMAP and other experiments. We find that if m_h ~ 125 GeV focus-point strips would be disfavoured, as would the low-tan beta stau-chi and stop -chi…
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