Stops and MET: the shape of things to come
Daniele S.M. Alves, Matthew R. Buckley, Patrick J. Fox, Joseph D., Lykken, and Chiu-Tien Yu

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that missing transverse energy (MET) based searches at the LHC can effectively detect or exclude stop squarks even in degenerate mass scenarios, significantly improving current bounds.
Contribution
The study shows that shape analyses of MET distributions can enhance detection sensitivity for degenerate stop squarks at the LHC, surpassing previous limitations.
Findings
MET shape analyses improve stop detection sensitivity.
Stops with masses up to 360 GeV can be excluded or discovered.
Degenerate stops remain detectable despite small mass differences.
Abstract
LHC experiments have placed strong bounds on the production of supersymmetric colored particles (squarks and gluinos), under the assumption that all flavors of squarks are nearly degenerate. However, the current experimental constraints on stop squarks are much weaker, due to the smaller production cross section and difficult backgrounds. While light stops are motivated by naturalness arguments, it has been suggested that such particles become nearly impossible to detect near the limit where their mass is degenerate with the sum of the masses of their decay products. We show that this is not the case, and that searches based on missing transverse energy (MET) have significant reach for stop masses above 175 GeV, even in the degenerate limit. We consider direct pair production of stops, decaying to invisible LSPs and tops with either hadronic or semi-leptonic final states. Modest…
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