Post LHC8 SUSY benchmark points for ILC physics
Howard Baer, Jenny List

TL;DR
This paper reassesses supersymmetry detection prospects at the ILC after LHC8 results, proposing new benchmark models that align with recent experimental constraints and exploring their potential signatures.
Contribution
It introduces a set of new ILC benchmark models reflecting current LHC8 constraints and diverse SUSY scenarios, guiding future collider searches.
Findings
All models currently evade LHC8 limits.
Models suggest promising signatures for ILC at 0.25-1 TeV.
Diverse SUSY phenomena remain possible post LHC8.
Abstract
We re-evaluate prospects for supersymmetry at the proposed International Linear e^+e^- Collider (ILC) in light of the first two years of serious data taking at LHC: LHC7 with ~5 fb^{-1} of pp collisions at sqrt{s}=7 TeV and LHC8 with ~20 fb^{-1} at \sqrt{s}=8 TeV. Strong new limits from LHC8 SUSY searches, along with the discovery of a Higgs boson with m_h~125 GeV, suggest a paradigm shift from previously popular models to ones with new and compelling signatures. After a review of the current status of supersymmetry, we present a variety of new ILC benchmark models, including: natural SUSY, radiatively-driven natural SUSY (RNS), NUHM2 with low m_A, a focus point case from mSUGRA/CMSSM, non-universal gaugino mass (NUGM) model, stau-coannihilation, Kallosh-Linde/spread SUSY model, mixed gauge-gravity mediation, normal scalar mass hierarchy (NMH), and one example with the recently…
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