Natural Supersymmetry and Implications for Higgs physics
Graham D. Kribs, Adam Martin, Arjun Menon

TL;DR
This paper re-evaluates LHC constraints on light third-generation squarks in Natural Supersymmetry, identifies remaining viable parameter regions, and predicts their distinct effects on Higgs couplings, with implications for future measurements.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of LHC bounds on natural supersymmetric models and links these to specific predictions for Higgs physics, including extensions to the NMSSM.
Findings
Strong constraints on most natural SUSY scenarios from LHC searches.
Identification of two remaining viable regions: compressed wedge and kinematic limit.
Predictions of distinct Higgs coupling deviations in these regions.
Abstract
We re-analyze the LHC bounds on light third generation squarks in Natural Supersymmetry, where the sparticles have masses inversely proportional to their leading-log contributions to the electroweak symmetry breaking scale. Higgsinos are the lightest supersymmetric particles; top and bottom squarks are the next-to-lightest sparticles that decay into both neutral and charged Higgsinos with well-defined branching ratios determined by Yukawa couplings and kinematics. The Higgsinos are nearly degenerate in mass, once the bino and wino masses are taken to their natural (heavy) values. We consider three scenarios for the stop and sbottom masses: (I) is light, (II) and are light, and (III) , , and are light. Dedicated stop searches are currently sensitive to Scenarios II and III, but not Scenario I.…
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