Discovering Uncolored Naturalness in Exotic Higgs Decays
David Curtin, Christopher B. Verhaaren

TL;DR
This paper explores the potential of exotic Higgs decays to mirror glueballs as a signature of uncolored naturalness theories like Folded SUSY and Twin Higgs, demonstrating their discovery prospects at current and future colliders.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed study of mirror glueball signatures from uncolored top partner theories and proposes new search strategies for detecting these exotic Higgs decays at colliders.
Findings
Mirror glueballs are a key signature of uncolored naturalness models.
Exotic Higgs decays can probe top partner masses up to 900-1500 GeV.
Collider searches for $h o XX o 4f$ can effectively test these theories.
Abstract
Solutions to the hierarchy problem usually require top partners. In standard SUSY or composite Higgs theories, the partners carry SM color and are becoming increasingly constrained by LHC searches. However, theories like Folded SUSY (FS), Twin Higgs (TH) and Quirky Little Higgs (QLH) introduce uncolored top partners, which can be SM singlets or carry electroweak charge. Their small production cross section left doubt as to whether the LHC can effectively probe such scenarios. Typically, these partners are charged under their own mirror color gauge group. In FS and QLH, the absence of light mirror matter allows glueballs to form at the bottom of the mirror spectrum. This is also the case in some TH realizations. The Higgs can decay to these mirror glueballs, with the glueballs decaying into SM particles with potentially observable lifetimes. We undertake the first detailed study of this…
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