Higgs, supersymmetry and dark matter after Run I of the LHC
Beranger Dumont

TL;DR
This paper reviews the impact of LHC Run I Higgs results on new physics models, especially supersymmetry and dark matter, highlighting constraints, negative search results, and tools for future analyses.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive assessment of how Higgs measurements constrain beyond the Standard Model theories and introduces publicly available analysis tools.
Findings
Higgs boson mass measured at about 125 GeV.
No evidence of new physics found at LHC Run I.
Constraints placed on supersymmetric models and dark matter scenarios.
Abstract
Two major problems call for an extension of the Standard Model (SM): the hierarchy problem in the Higgs sector and the dark matter in the Universe. The discovery of a Higgs boson with mass of about 125 GeV was clearly the most significant piece of news from CERN's Large Hadron Collider (LHC). In addition to representing the ultimate triumph of the SM, it shed new light on the hierarchy problem and opened up new ways of probing new physics. The various measurements performed at Run I of the LHC constrain the Higgs couplings to SM particles as well as invisible and undetected decays. In this thesis, the impact of the LHC Higgs results on various new physics scenarios is assessed, carefully taking into account uncertainties and correlations between them. Generic modifications of the Higgs coupling strengths, possibly arising from extended Higgs sectors or higher-dimensional operators, are…
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Taxonomy
TopicsParticle physics theoretical and experimental studies · Computational Physics and Python Applications · Dark Matter and Cosmic Phenomena
